Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

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Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men**

PESHAWAR: Of the 22 levies officials abducted from three checkposts in Frontier Region Peshawar (FR) on December 27, at least 20 of these were murdered early on Sunday morning in Jabai, Express News reported.

AC Peshawar Habibullah Arif confirmed the incident before telling Express News that they have managed to recover the bodies of the dead.

Arif added that the injured levies man had received a bullet wound to the head and was in critical condition. He though could not confirm reports about a second levies man who apparently escaped relatively unhurt.

Arif said that the elders were deep in negotiations with the militants earlier in the evening, but a few hours after that news of the mass murder reached.

The levies men had been kidnapped two nights ago from the Koi Hasankhel area when nearly 200 militants stormed three checkposts. Two levies officials were killed in that attack but their comrades were kidnapped.

The following day, the local FR political administration convened a jirga of the elders. At this jirga, the locals were given two days to recover the abducted men under the local area responsibility arrangement.

However, early on Sunday morning, the levies’ force captors chose to execute them.


http://www.meem40.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/Images/inalilla.gif

TTP has claimed responsibility for killing the levies personnel. They had recently offered to hold fire for negotiations, but they shot dead their own offer in a matter of days.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

Inna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raajiuoon

This is getting ridiculous. Govt needs to call an APC as soon as possible and discuss ways to tackle these lowlives.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

This shows their seriousness in talks, and what they want to achieve from negotiations if ever held. Sadly Peshawar is turning into another swat.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

The levies men were kidnapped by TTP Dara Adam khel. The army declared victory against them in February 2012 after operations spanning around four years. It seems they just moved to Peshawar.

Military operation in Darra Adamkhel concludes - thenews.com.pk

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

With Peshawar under attack, Pakistan looks the other way | Pakistan: Now or Never?

With Peshawar under attack, Pakistan looks the other way

Pakistan has been facing gun and bomb attacks for so long, it is tempting to think it will continue to muddle along, the situation never becoming so bad as to galvanise it into action. And maybe it will.

But a series of attacks in and around Peshawar this month should give serious pause for thought.

First came a raid on Peshawar airport in mid-December, for which the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility. Then political leader Bashir Ahmed Bilour – an outspoken critic of the Taliban and a senior minister in the provincial government of the Awami National Party (ANP) – was killed in a suicide bombing.

While the city was still in shock over Bilour’s death, its defences were attacked. Taliban militants assaulted three security posts meant to separate the so-called settled areas from the neighbouring Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), killing two men from the security forces and taking 22 others prisoner. At least 20 of them were later killed by the Taliban,Pakistani media reported.

It is difficult to escape the notion of a city under siege.

For outsiders, particularly the United States – distracted by domestic political wrangling, weary of the war in Afghanistan, and weary too of trying to work out how to deal with Pakistan – the prospect of Peshawar succumbing to Taliban influence should be ringing alarm bells.

And for Pakistanis, the potential loss of Peshawar should be even more alarming – even a small risk of that happening should be enough to stir memories of the unthinking drift to war that led to the loss of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, in 1971. Indian military intervention ensured Bangladesh won independence, but the origins of the conflict lay in the dissonance between Pakistan’s Punjab-dominated heartland and ethnic Bengalis; just as now there is a difference in understanding of the threat of militancy between mainly Pashtun Peshawar and the centres of power in the Punjabi cities of Lahore, Islamabad and Rawalpindi.

Yet for all those familiar tripwires, the alarm over the attacks on Peshawar has been muffled at best. While the ANP in Peshawar has appealed for consensus among political parties on a strategy to fight terrorism, many in the rest of Pakistan are looking the other way. True, some of the English-language media has run powerful commentary arguing that Pakistan must wake up to the threat of terrorism, but on the whole, initial shock over the attacks has dissipated into confusion.

Here is the problem – or rather an additional problem compounding Pakistan’s internal divisions over whether the war against the Taliban is its own fight or one being carried out at America’s behest.

All of this is happening at a time when the country is heading into an election, expected next May. Few want to rock the boat with, for example, a military offensive in North Waziristan that might unleash a wave of reprisal bombings on political rallies across Pakistan. For the first time in its history, a democratically elected government is set to complete its term and hand over power to another democratically elected government – a milestone worth fighting for.

But the boat is already rocking. A huge political rally held in Lahore by Islamist preacher Tahir ul-Qadri – on the same day as ANP leader Bilour’s funeral in Peshawar – has got everyone talking about whether he was sponsored by “the establishment” (the Pakistan Army and its Inter-Services Intelligence agency) to disrupt the democratic process. Qadri has promised a march on Islamabad in January if changes are not made to the electoral process in time for the polls. And since it is not possible to make those changes in time, his threat has raised fears he might be paving the way for a government of technocrats which would (with the blessing of the military) take over for a few years until Pakistan’s crises are resolved.

To an outsider, it sounds like another Pakistani conspiracy theory. To a Pakistani, used to the army’s dominance of politics and the so-called Deep State’s ability to pull the strings from behind the scenes, the threat to the democratic process is real. Among the unlikely cast of characters being conjured up by the media to support a government of technocrats are Qadri, the Defa-e-Pakistan alliance of militant and religious groups, and Imran Khan’s Tehrik-e-Insaf Pakistan (PTI). Qadri and PTI deny taking any support from the military.

In reality, nobody knows for sure what is going on, and because of the uncertainty, everyone is hedging their bets. And because everyone is hedging their bets, the country will not take on the Taliban. Meanwhile the Pakistan Army – which dominates security policy – says it will launch a new military operation only with political consensus.

DIVIDED POLITICIANS

And there is no political consensus.

The ruling Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) has devoted much of its energy to simply staying in power to prove the democratic system can work – President Asif Ali Zardari confounded everyone by keeping his job and his government in place long enough to hand on the mantle of the PPP, which he inherited from his late wife Benazir Bhutto, to their son Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, who made his political debut in Pakistan this week.

If Zardari and the PPP survived, it was partly thanks to opposition leader and former prime minister Nawaz Sharif, who having been ousted in a coup in 1999 knew better than to leave a gap where the army might take over. Sharif’s Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) is the main challenger in the coming election and is likely to do well because of the PPP-led government’s reputation for poor governance and corruption. He has everything to lose if an escalation in militant attacks forces the election to be postponed.

Imran Khan’s PTI has promised to break the mould of dynastic politics and end corruption. But in a constituency-based electoral system where local patronage buys votes, Khan does not have the party machinery to win a significant number of seats. And having positioned himself as a campaigner against U.S. drone attacks in the tribal areas, which he claimed were the main cause of militancy, he has left himself no space to take a strong stand against the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan.

The Peshawar-based ANP, and the Karachi-based Muttahida Quami Movement (MQM), whose leader Altaf Hussain lives in exile in London, have been pretty much alone in speaking out clearly against the Taliban. “The time has come for decisive action,” ANP’s Bushra Gohar, a member of the National Assembly, told Newsweek Pakistan. “We have to expose these elements. The time for apologies is over. We need to adopt a clear-cut policy.”

But in an election year, the heartland of Pakistani politics is in Punjab where both the PML-N and PTI are based and where the biggest number of seats in parliament are to be won. The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, in a statement released earlier this week, said it had no quarrel with those two parties. Even the PPP, whose roots are in Sindh province, knows its survival comes from winning popular votes in Punjab while maintaining an uneasy relationship – as it has done since it came to power – with the army. All have an interest in appeasing the religious right, whose street power in Punjab by far outstrips its ability to win votes in elections. All would be vulnerable to reprisal attacks by militants with deep roots in Punjab were they to take a strong stand against them.

That leaves Peshawar bearing the brunt of TTP violence, along with the rest of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and the tribal areas themselves. Karachi too is suffering from violence, but Peshawar is even more vulnerable, lying next to the tribal areas.

Many of us have declared Pakistan to be on the brink so often over the years that it becomes hard to take ourselves seriously. It survives, doesn’t it? That famed “resilience”. And the chances are, it will be fine, muddling through until the election.

And yet the steady infiltration of the Taliban into Peshawar, and their apparent ability to carry out attacks there with impunity, should worry everyone. All the more so since so many elsewhere in Pakistan are showing no signs of responding to the threat to a city barely two hours’ drive from the capital.

(Reuters file photo of an earlier bomb attack on Peshawar)

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

duplicate

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

That is time for a making a national commission on real bases to suggest ways . We will have to get rid of our past specially corruption , links with terrorists and hidden links with US.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

yae jang meriee nahineen
yae jang marierr nahieen
.......................

.....................................

yae jang meriee nahineen
yae jang marierr nahieen

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

jo ho raha theek ho raha hai...

yae jang meriee nahineen
yae jang meriee nahineen

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

Kayani beigharat..." "uck the consensuses ... and go do what you should, if you have what it takes.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

Before this war began, the danger was confined FATA. But now it has spread to cities like Karachi and Peshawar. I dont know how they can be fought there, as more opportunities for them to hide. Any operations will result in a large number of collateral damage which the militants will use to rack up support for their cause which is dwindling after each terrorist attack. War in urban areas is never easy, like I have been mentioning before our whole counter insurgency policy has proved to be a failure. Operations for the sake of operations are nothing, there are many other facets of counter terrorism which have not been employed. At the moment it seems we are simply chasing a mirage (the terrorists), attack them in Peshawar, they will regroup in Charsadda, attack them there and they will appear some where else. Like I mentioned in the previous post that TTP dara Adam Khel had accepted the responsibility for the kidnappings, and the army had claimed victory against them earlier this year. Nothing to do with NWA operations.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

yaar it is not abt a concerted operation only ... it is abt intent....it is abt doing something

just a question

what did israel do when 11 of his Olympic players were killed by PLO in 1970? they killed each and every who was responsible...wherever he was hiding

why cant pakistan military make a mission that key TTP leadership will be killed in a month?

how hard it is? seriously, just tell me... how hard it is..use money, resources, intelligence but kill him in 30 days

you saw the video by TTP...you saw them all..mahsud, ehsan uallah ehsan, wali..they were all sitting there...in 30 days kill them

dont do any operation, if you cant.. but just start eliminating every leader

whoever will lead TTP will be killed in a month.....PERIOD

it will have a huge impact

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

He is not alone , It is a nonsense mentality looking everywhere since the assassination of Liaqat Ali Khan and perhaps prior to him in a Dakota accident , killing first Pakistani nominated army chief and the second senior after him .

We are pushed to the wall .

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

First of all where were the terrorists killed by Israeli? In Israeli territory or Palestinian areas?

The issue now more severe and complex as these guys have gained ground in settled areas. Urban warfare is never easy, especially when you are fighting it within your own country.

I agree with intelligence based operations in which terrorist cells are busted with least possible collateral damage. As careless attacks there would swing the public opinion and the militants would use it to gain sympathy. Its important to capture the top leadership of TTP and punish them. Why is that in 8 years of operations the military has not been able to arrest even a single person from their high command?

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

isareli operation was done in each and every corner of the world...no matter where these PLO guys were hiding they were killed...in austria, in UK, in middle east, in USA..it was a full fledged intelligence operation...if you ever get a chance, do read abt it...that is how nations defend themselves and earn respect of their people

and i have already agreed with you that maybe full military operation is now too tough....too late...

but i am actually offering a very simply solution...eliminate top leadership

in next 30 days, eliminate mahsud, ehsan ullah ehsan and wali.. and for that DO WHATEVER IT TAKES....use money, use intelligence, use women to seduce, send suicide bomber, do whatever it takes.... but in next 30 days eliminate those 3 guys

and we all know that with so much resources that state and army has it is absolutely doable

no collateral damage...nothing...taliban will retaliate with more suicide attacks...no problem..we are already facing them

when TTP announces new leadership, immediately go after them....and kill them and keep on doing that

without leadership it will be very hard for TTP to sustain

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

you know the answer Ali....strategic assets mentality....still thinking to use them against india and in Afghanistan when US will be gone...

pak army is abosutely not clean ...... otherwise how the hell ehsan ullah ehsan is still alive ....it is a joke!

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

I think this shows the failure of ISI too. During the past few years, the impunity with which the terrorists have carried out the attacks and the intelligence has not been able to preempt them depicts that the agency is over rated.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

Any suicide attacks by TTP to avenge their leadership will expose them further and erode their support base. Its a delicate balance, if Pakistan army carries out indiscriminate operations the militants will use that to gain sympathy. On the other hand the attacks from militants dont bode well for them. They want to draw Pakistan Army into warfare within cities for the same purpose. Its important to capture/kill their leadership, disrupt their command and control and somehow halt their money trail.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

phoenixdesi ! To have the ability of such operation you should ask for the removal of pathan from pakistan army. So that they can carpet bombing the FATA and KPK.

Re: Militants murder 20 kidnapped levies men

Chill, no one is talking about carpet bombing of the area.