Tribal Elders, Clerics Talk to Militants for Troops Release

Author: 
Azhar Masood & Agencies
Publication Date: 
Sat, 2007-09-01 03:00

ISLAMABAD, 1 September 2007 — Pakistani authorities yesterday sent tribal elders and clerics to negotiate with militants who are believed to have captured more than 100 soldiers in a northwestern region on the Afghan border.

However, militants claimed they had captured nearly 300 soldiers and were still holding them.

The Pakistani troops had been traveling in a 16-vehicle convoy providing security for trucks hauling food in the South Waziristan tribal area Thursday, when bad weather forced them to stop and set up camp, an intelligence official said.

The soldiers — who had been traveling between South Waziristan’s main town, Wana, and Ladha, another town in the area — were surrounded and captured by militants who apparently believed the troops were conducting a military operation against the militants.

No fighting took place, said a senior army officer. Tribal elders intervened at the request of Pakistani authorities to free the soldiers.

“This misunderstanding has been removed,” the intelligence official said. “The missing soldiers have been traced and they are safe and would return to their base soon.” But a militant leader, who said his men had seized the soldiers, told AP they were still holding nearly 300 troops. “About 300 soldiers were present in our areas. We captured them, snatched their weapons and later shifted them to different places,” he said.

Speaking from an undisclosed location, he confirmed that elders had contacted his group about freeing the soldiers.

“We have taken no decision to free the soldiers,” he said.

The incident comes two days after militants freed 18 soldiers and a government official, kidnapped earlier this month.

Meanwhile, dozens of militants attacked a northwest Pakistan military checkpoint before dawn yesterday, killing at least two soldiers and wounding six others, police said.

The attack happened in the Swat Valley village of Gul Bagh, about 250 km northeast of Peshawar, the capital of North West Frontier Province, said Mohammed Hafeez, the region’s police chief.

As the injured and dead soldiers were being transported to a hospital, a car bomb went off near a police vehicle escorting the ambulances and killed a bystander, said Mohammed Khan, another area police official. Authorities were trying to determine whether it was a suicide attack.

Pakistan is a key ally of the United States in its campaign against terrorism, and it has witnessed scores of such assaults after the attacks in the US of Sept. 11, 2001.

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