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third eye

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Would these be called ' excesses' as armed forces operations are often labelled ..?


RELATIVES ACCUSE PAK FORCES OF SWAT KILLINGS

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | Relatives accuse Pakistan forces in Swat killings

MINGORA: Nearly three months after Pakistan retook the Swat Valley from the Taliban, bloodied corpses are still turning up on the streets. This time, the victims are suspected militants – and the killers are alleged to be security forces.

The army and the police deny the accusations, which the leading Pakistani human rights watchdog says are credible.

The killings are a sign of the troubles still facing the valley, even as US officials cite the offensive – which is now winding down – as a success in Islamabad's campaign against Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants threatening both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The bloodshed comes as many of the two million people who fled the fighting are now returning to rebuild their lives. Last week, two suicide blasts rocked the main town of Mingora in another deadly reminder of the threat the militants still pose.

The corpses began appearing several weeks ago, residents say. On Monday, 15 bodies were found in a town east of Mingora, local TV stations reported, although authorities would not confirm that. Another 18 were recovered from different parts of Swat on Aug. 15, authorities said.

The killings are a grim echo of Taliban rule over the valley, when militants dumped bodies of alleged spies or government collaborators on the streets to terrify people into submission. Residents recalled public beheadings and of decapitated bodies being left in Mingora's main square so regularly that it earned the nickname, 'Bloody Square.'

'Previously we were afraid of the Taliban. Now, we're afraid of the army,' one man said, standing at the site where the bodies of two people, 35-year-old butcher Gohar Ullah and his younger brother Zahoor, 30, were found last Friday. Like many in Mingora, he would not give his name for fear of reprisals.

About seven hours after their relatives carried the brothers' corpses away, blood was still pooled in the dusty back alley where they were slain. Blood splatter on a wall and wooden door indicated the men had been brought there alive and shot.

'More than a month ago, they were arrested on the charge of militancy involvement,' during a police raid on their home, said relative Habib Ur-Rehman, as he helped clean and shroud his cousins' bodies for burial in a small courtyard not far from where they were found.

Four other brothers were taken at the same time, along with their father, Rahim, whose corpse turned up three weeks ago in the same area, Ur-Rehman said, as the women of the family gathered in another courtyard nearby, wailing and crying in grief.

Police and the army in Swat denied having had the two men in custody, or holding their other four brothers or father.

'No, I don't know about them,' said Swat District Police Officer Ghulam Farooq Qazi. 'They are not in my custody.'

But like the army, Qazi said he thought that the bodies turning up on the streets belonged to militants.

'The militants, they did many crimes ... they are fighting each other now,' he said. 'Another (reason) is, the people who are suffering because of these criminals, they are also trying to take their revenge.'

Local residents found the bodies of the Ullah brothers. One man, who gave his name only as Liaqat, said he heard between four and six shots fired at around 4 am Friday, but didn't leave his home due to a nighttime curfew. Other locals gathered at the site nodded in agreement.

Like many of the corpses discovered on the streets, they were blindfolded with their hands tied behind their backs, said one relative. One had been shot in the head and the other just below the eye, he said.

'My sons had nothing to do (with the Taliban). They had no fight, they were innocent,' said Bakht Begum, the men's mother, as she wiped away tears. 'Even my husband had no fault. They killed my husband and my two sons, and now they should release the others.'

Militants began asserting their influence in Swat in 2007 - part of a wave of Al-Qaeda and Taliban expanding their reach from safe havens near the Afghan border. By April, they controlled much of the one-time tourist retreat, just four hours' drive from the capital, Islamabad.

The army launched a major operation in April that it claims killed more than 1,600 militants.

While the insurgents have undoubtedly been pushed back, their top leadership escaped, keeping many of the valley's residents on edge.

Most Swat residents interviewed said they were unconcerned if Taliban were indeed being killed. They said they felt no pity for those who had sown terror and misery and that the killings might be what is needed to stop the insurgents from returning.

'Look at what they have done to innocent civilian people,' said Shahed Javed, a restaurant owner in central Mingora who opened his shop again in the past few days. 'In such a situation, it's a good thing.'

The independent Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said in a recent report it had received 'credible reports of numerous extrajudicial killings and reprisals.' – AP
 
Why would Police or Army create controversy?I think people are forgetting Talibans messed up Pushtuns who must take revenge.Here's a report
New wave of revenge killing feared in Swat

Tuesday, August 25, 2009
By Ikram Hoti

ISLAMABAD: Countless young men along the highways from Mansehra to Battagram and from Sakhakot to Shangla in the NWFP are living in the fear of being attacked and thrown in the woods, fields or on the winding streets in villages and towns. More than 200 corpses have already been found along these highways by mid-August following the fall of Swat, Shangla and Buner to security forces in July last.

The News has found out that anti-Taliban Lashkars, the resurgent cousins’ groups acting on Pakhtun tribal vengeance and the Taliban targeting the ‘traitors that helped security forces are involved in a new war of retribution. While security forces enjoy the windfall gains in relative escape from being targeted in this situation, the entire build-up indicates that ‘settling scores’ the three sides are not just engaged in this war but also threaten to launch a new resurgence.

Signs of this new resurgence are crystallising in and around the towns of Mardan and the Frontier capital of Peshawar. This build-up, evident from internecine attacks in the region especially in Peshawar, the latest being the Momin Colony suicide attack leaving three dead and 11 injured, is more intimidating than the previous trend wherein the Taliban attacked the police and the security forces.

Regrouping in the vast region of Malakand Agency, around Charsadda, Mardan, Nowshera and Peshawar, these Taliban threaten to launch attacks on Lashkars, elders and the families that help the security forces and the police, and elders that help in capturing the Taliban for turning them over to the army and police. “They even target those suspected of such activities or in any manner maintaining contacts with such suspects,” said Syed Kamal Shah, former NWFP health minister and convener of Pakhtun Aman Lashkar.

When asked to explain the activity of “newly emerging cousins’ groups, he said: “these are young men who happen to be brothers and cousins of the security personnel and the young locals targeted by the Taliban either in murderous arrogance or in order to perpetrate their disruptive activity in the region”.

He added that the trigger-happy among those in the Taliban ranks who were freshly drafted by the terrorist organisation had their way wherever they were purportedly assigned tasks in Swat, Dir, Buner and the rest of Malakand. “They were so ruthless that they conducted mock trials under ‘Islamic courts’ and executed death punishments with little regard for the Pakhtun vengeance code that normally scares such perpetrators off.”

Jehandad, an elder from Battagram who lost his nephew in the Taliban attack on the highway connecting Shangla to Battagram on the Karakoram Highway, said: “I cannot help telling my sons to avenge my nephew. How can a Pakhtun stay away from revenge killing when there is a chance, which the victory of security forces has offered us by the grace of Almighty Allah?”

Dost Mohammad, another elder from Kalam said: “I would not stop my sons from attacking these accomplices of Taliban, who killed three of my nephews and left their widows and kids to mourn them for the rest of their lives.”

New wave of revenge killing feared in Swat
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