Army air strikes kill 5 militants in Pak's Khyber Agency

Military helicopter gunships on Sunday carried out strikes in Khyber agency in northwest Pakistan

Update: 2014-03-02 12:55 GMT
Khyber agency. File Photo. AP

Peshawar: Military helicopter gunships on Sunday carried out strikes in Khyber agency in northwest Pakistan, targeting the militants involved in the attack on a polio team and killed five suspected terrorists.

The fresh attack came hours after the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan announced a ceasefire last evening.

Security sources said helicopter gunships struck the headquarters of Mullah Tamanche, who was involved in the attack on polio workers in Jamrud on Saturday that left 12

security personnel and one child dead.

The Ayubi Markaz of Mullah Tamanche in Bara was destroyed in the air strikes whereas five suspected militants were killed, the sources said.

Helicopter gunships also targeted militant hideouts in Kalanga and surrounding areas and a number of them were destroyed.

Meanwhile, Maj Gen Asim Bajwa, who heads the military’s media wing Inter-Services Public Relations, told media that security forces had already cornered terrorist elements in North Waziristan and were now ready to mop them up.

Talking to the US channel NBC News, he said the Army had already committed over 150,000 troops to fighting the insurgency in tribal areas, compared to less than 100,000 on the Indian border.

This "reflects how seriously we are taking this new, internal threat," he said. "Over the years, we have cornered the terror elements in North Waziristan. Now, all we have to do is mop them up."

An unnamed officer of seventh Infantry Division told NBC News that the Taliban had an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 hardened fighters in North Waziristan.

Last week, senior Pakistani defence officials held a briefing in Washington for the US media and after the briefing several US media outlets reported that a military offensive in

the tribal areas was imminent.

The reports pointed out that Pakistan had already softened the targets by launching a series of air strikes at Taliban hideouts, particularly in North Waziristan.

The CIA has conducted hundreds of drone attacks in Pakistan's tribal areas, especially North Waziristan, since 2004. But they were suspended by the US almost two months ago as peace talks? between Pakistan and the Taliban got under way.

 

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