Sunday, 22 March 2015

87 killed in Pakistan army, Taliban clash


At least 87 people have been killed and more than a 100 wounded in ongoing clashes between the Pakistani military and Taliban-allied fighters in the country’s northwestern Khyber tribal area, the military said.

The fighting, involving both ground troops and aerial bombardment, began on Saturday and was ongoing in the Sipah area of the Tirah Valley, a military spokesperson told Al Jazeera on Sunday.

The military said that it has killed at least 80 people, all designated “terrorists”, while seven soldiers were also killed.

“[Operations] will continue with full force till total terrorist elimination from these areas,” tweeted Maj-Gen Asim Saleem Bajwa, the military’s spokesperson, on Saturday evening.

Pakistan has been battling the Lashkar-e-Islam in the Khyber tribal area, adjacent to Peshawar and part of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas, since October last year, when it expanded anti-Taliban operations into the area.

Operations have particularly focused on the Tirah Valley, where Sunday’s fighting was also taking place.
On March 12, the Lashkar-e-Islam, led by local commander Mangal Bagh, formally entered into an alliance with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, an umbrella organisation of anti-State religious extremist groups that have been fighting against Pakistan since 2007.

So far, operations in the Khyber tribal area have resulted in the deaths of at least 419 people, all designated “terrorists,” as well as at least 17 soldiers, the military said.

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