Publish dateMonday 27 April 2009 - 09:27
Story Code : 7583
Army says it has launched offensive against Taliban
Pakistan's armed forces say they have launched an offensive against Taliban militant hideouts in the country's North West Frontier Province, a few days after the United States expressed concern over the militants' advance.
 Pakistan on Sunday launched a new offensive against Taliban militants in its northwest after coming under heavy US pressure to halt advancing extremists, jolting a shaky peace deal.
The February accord to put three million people under sharia law was billed as the end of a nearly two-year brutal Taliban insurgency that ripped apart the pristine ski resort of Swat but was followed by further Taliban encroachments.
"Enough is enough. We have decided to flush them out," interior ministry chief Rehman Malik told private television channel Geo.
"The peace accord was linked to peace. When there is no peace, there is no use for that accord," Malik said.
"I appeal to the Taliban to lay down their arms. There is no other option for them," he said.
The military said Frontier Corps paramilitary launched an operation against the Taliban in Lower Dir, one of the districts of Malakand covered by the sharia law deal, after militants killed a soldier in a deadly ambush.
Malik said the district was "totally under our control".
"Lal Qila in Lower Dir has been fully secured after the successful operation by the Frontier Corps (FC) against the miscreants today," the military said.
It said a "number" of militants had been killed and that the dead bodies of 26 insurgents had been found.
The military reported heavy exchanges of fire and said one security force personnel was killed and four wounded.
A security official identified a dead militant commander as Maulana Shahid, said to be "in charge" of the Taliban in Dir and killed with eight others when troops shelled his madrassa, or religious seminary.
Pakistani security forces have been heavily criticised for allowing the Taliban to act with impunity while either incapable or unwilling to intervene.
But the main Taliban spokesman in the area and a representative of Soofi Mohammad, the pro-Taliban cleric who signed the February agreement with the government slammed Sunday's operation as a "violation" of the deal.
"If the government commits atrocities against us then the Taliban reserves the right to reply back," said Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan.
"Now there is Tehreek-e-Taliban Swat and soon Tehreek-e-Taliban Peshawar will be established. How far can the government run? If it continues with the same policies this country will soon become Afghanistan," he said.
Tehreek-e-Taliban is a loose umbrella group for the Pakistani Taliban lead by Baitullah Mehsud.
"It is the sheer violation of the agreement which we had with the provincial government on February 16," Mohammad's spokesman Ameer Izzat Khan told AFP, adding that he would convene a consultative council to decide about the deal.
"If they behave like this then we also reserve the right to review the peace accord," he said.
The advance from Swat into the neighbouring district of Buner of hundreds of Taliban, whose brethren were ousted by the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan, saw Washington brand the extremists "an existential threat" to Pakistan.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last week warned that Pakistan was "basically abdicating to the Taliban and to the extremists" and US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates called on the country's leaders to take action.
Clinton also voiced "concerns" for Pakistan's nuclear arsenal if the Taliban topples the government, according to an interview transcript with Fox News.
"We cannot, you know, let this go on any further. Which is why we're pushing so hard for the Pakistanis to come together around a strategy to take their country back," Clinton told the network.
The United States insists that extremists, historically supported by Pakistani intelligence, pose the greatest threat to the country and not arch rival India -- as traditionally viewed by the Pakistan's powerful military.
Across Pakistan, more than 1,800 people have been killed in a wave of Al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked extremist attacks since July 2007.
A spokesman for President Asif Ali Zardari, who recently ratified the sharia law deal, drew a distinction between the peace deal with local elders and action against "those taking the law into their own hands".
"The peace agreement has not been breached but action against militants was an expression of the determination that no one would be allowed to disturb law and order," spokesman Farhatullah Babar told AFP.
Source : Afghan Voice Agency(AVA)
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