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Peshawar: Eleven people, including nine Pakistani soldiers and two tribesmen, were injured when two NATO warplanes blitzed Pakistan's Angoor Adda town, a border village on the Pak-Afghan border in South Waziristan, on the night between Thursday and Friday [11 July].
Angoor Adda, which is about 25 kilometers west of Wana, often comes under attacks by the US and Afghan troops from the Paktika province. Official and local residents of the border town told this correspondent by telephone that two NATO planes had bombed the mountainous areas between Pakistan and Afghanistan. They said several bombs fell inside the Pakistani territory and hit the border towns of Zayara Leeta and Musa Neeka areas near Angoor Adda.
The sources said a joint post of Pakistan Army and paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC) on the border also came under attack that caused serious injuries to nine soldiers.
The injured soldiers, reportedly belonged to Pakistan Army, were airlifted to a military hospital in Bannu. Some of them were identified as Naik Omar Iqbal, Sepoy Imran, Sepoy Ali Gul, Sepoy Rafiq, Waqas Maseeh and barber Faisal.
Two local tribesmen living in Angoor Adda were also injured in the attack. The residents said four vehicles owned by the tribesmen were damaged in the bombing. A local resident of Angoor Adda, Mohammad Gulzar said the bombing had shaken the whole town and terrified the residents. "The bombing was so heavy that rocked the whole town," remarked Gulzar.
Also, he said after the bombing by the two NATO planes, several mortar rounds were fired at the Pakistani territory. The sources said all the rounds fell inside Pakistan. A senior government official in Wana, the headquarters of South Waziristan, confirmed that the Pakistani post was destroyed, but said he was not clear whether it was hit by planes or mortar rounds.
There were also reports that mortar rounds were fired at the Pakistani territory when some militants attacked the US military camp at Birmal area in Afghanistan's Paktika province. Similarly, residents in Wana told this correspondent that a US spy plane was seen flying over Wana, Azam Warsak and Angoor Adda towns on Thursday night.
The attack by NATO forces created a sense of insecurity among the people living in the border areas with Afghanistan. Several attempts were made to approach the Pakistan Army spokesman, Maj Gen Athar Abbas, for comments but he was unavailable.
Meanwhile,
ISPR [Inter Services Public Relations] press release says that six personnel of paramilitary troops sustained injuries on Friday when mortar shells fired from across the Afghan border hit Sera checkpost in Angoor Adda of South Waziristan Agency (SWA).
In retaliation to the unprovoked mortar attack, the Pak troops opened fire, which resulted in several casualties on the other side of the border. However, the number of deaths could not be ascertained. Pakistan lodged a strong protest with the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) headquarters.
Originally published by The News website, Islamabad, in English 12 Jul 08.
(c) 2008 BBC Monitoring South Asia. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.
Story Source: BBC Monitoring South Asia