Khar, July 15: Pro-government tribesmen killed 23 militants in clashes in Pakistan’s northwest in the latest violence between tribal militias and Taliban insurgents, a government official said Tuesday.
Elsewhere in the volatile northwest, suspected militants attacked an oil tanker carrying fuel to NATO forces in Afghanistan, killing two people, an official said.
The clashes between militants and tribesmen took place in the village of Ambar in the Mohmand region, part of the lawless tribal belt along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan where top Taliban and al-Qaeda leaders are believed to be hiding.
Syed Ahmad Jan, a senior regional administrator, said local tribal militia asked the militants to leave the area late Monday. The militants refused and opened fire, sparking a gun battle, Jan said.
Pakistan’s government has encouraged tribesmen in the semiautonomous frontier region to form local militias – known as lashkars – to repel Taliban militants blamed for attacks in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Such groups have been set up in several regions but face stiff Taliban resistance.
The attack on the oil tanker took place in the nearby Khyber region, said Fazal Mahmood, a local government official. The attackers opened fire on the truck, then fled when the security forces escorting the convoy returned fire, Mahmood said. The truck driver and a passer-by were killed. The tanker was not damaged.
Taliban militants have frequently targeted NATO supply convoys in the region, home to the Khyber Pass, a major land transit route for U.S. and NATO supplies into Afghanistan.
Pakistan’s military is readying its latest major offensive against Taliban fighters in the South Waziristan tribal region to the south. The U.S. strongly supports Islamabad’s efforts and believes they could help the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan. But Pakistan also has to grapple with a massive refugee crisis in the northwest sparked by another major offensive in the Swat Valley. Amir Haider Khan Hoti, the chief minister of the North West Frontier Province, assured refugees Monday the government was strengthening the police force to help keep out the Taliban. The army has already said it expects to stay in Swat for another year.
–Agencies–