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1 May 2009 The Taliban overran a local
headquarters and captured 10 troops of the Dir Levies,
a paramilitary police force, as fighting continues in
the district the government claimed was secured four
days ago. The military also claimed the Taliban
suffered heavy casualties in Buner as al Qaeda
encourage Pakistanis to rebel.
A company of 60 Taliban fighters attacked a Levies
outpost in the town of Dir in the district of the same
name, Dawn reported. The Levies are a paramilitary
police force. A Subedar, one of the senior most ranks
in the Levies, was among those captured during the
assault. The Taliban released the Levies personnel
just 13 hours after their capture.
The fighting in Dir continues despite claims from
senior government and military officials that Dir was
secured days ago. The military claimed seven Taliban
fighters were killed during clashes in the Darmal
region. A curfew has been imposed in the Madain
region, a Taliban stronghold, Geo News reported. The
military is shelling Taliban targets in Madain as well
as in the Chakdara, another Taliban stronghold.
Fighting continues in Buner as
peace talks are underway
The Pakistani military is battling for the fourth
day in an effort to dislodge the Taliban in the
district of Buner. The military continues to fight to
take control of the strategic passes that lead into
the district. The military claimed it secured the
Ambala heights yesterday, but fighting is said to be
raging for control of the ridge.
The military claimed another 55 to 60 Taliban
fighters were killed during fighting in Buner over the
past 24 hours. Previously, the military said an
estimated 50 Taliban fighters were in Buner, and
another 82 Taliban fighters were killed in Dir,
putting the total Taliban reported killed at more than
190.
Between 500 and 1,000 Taliban and al Qaeda
fighters, led by Ibn Amin, are thought to be operating
in Buner. No estimate is available for Taliban forces
in Dir.
Despite the Taliban resistance in Buner and Dir,
the government is eager to restore the peace
agreement, known as the Malakand Accord. The peace
agreement called for the end of military operations in
Swat and the imposition of sharia, or Islamic law, in
the districts of Malakand, Swat, Shangla, Buner, Dir,
Chitral, and Kohistan, a region that encompasses
nearly one-third of the Northwest Frontier Province.
The government is in active talks with Sufi
Mohammed, the leader of the banned pro-Taliban
Tehrik-e-Nifaz-e-Shariat-e-Mohammed [TNSM or the
Movement for the Enforcement of Mohammed's Law]. Sufi
is supposed to be the intermediary in negotiations but
has openly sided with the Taliban, led by his
son-in-law Mullah Fazlullah.
Sufi is demanding that the military end operations
in Dir and Buner, and insists on personally approving
the judges for the Islamic courts.
The TNSM has admitted in the past it can control
the violence in Pakistan's northwest, and again
confirmed this. "The fighting will end automatically
[after the enforcement of sharia]," said Izzat Khan, a
spokesman for Sufi. "We are ready for talks with the
government on the appointment of judges and a
ceasefire in the region."
Al Qaeda leader calls for
uprising
As the fighting continues in the northwest, a
senior al Qaeda leader has called for Pakistanis to
fight the Pakistani Army and the government.
"Muslims in Pakistan, and especially their clerics,
should prepare themselves and rise up to perform the
duty ... of fighting the Pakistani army and the rest
of the apparatus that are the pillars of their
tyrannical state," said Abu Yahya al Libi, a senior al
Qaeda spokesman and ideologue, in a 29-page document
released on the Internet.
Al Libi described the Pakistani government and
military as tools of the West.
"The criminals in the Pakistani government and its
army have not only been a cover for the occupying
crusader infidels in Afghanistan, they have directly
helped them in committing all their crimes in
Afghanistan and elsewhere," Al Libi said, according to
excerpts provided by Reuters.
Al Libi was the first al Qaeda leader to urge the
Pakistani people and the Army to turn against
then-President Pervez Musharraf's regime after the
military stormed the radical Red Mosque in the heart
of Islamabad. Zawahiri and bin Laden have repeated
this call to rebellion several times since then.
The US put a $ 5 million bounty out for al Libi at
the end of March 2009. Al Libi was a military
commander in Afghanistan until his capture by the US
military during 2003. He rose to prominence in al
Qaeda after he escaped from Bagram Prison in
Afghanistan in the summer of 2005, along with senior
al Qaeda operatives Abu Nasir al Qahtani, Abu Abdallah
al Shami, and Omar Farouq. Al Libi is the only member
of the notorious "Bagram Four" active in al Qaeda; the
others have been killed or captured. |