Swat’s main town ‘fully under control’ – Pakistan army

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistani forces have regained  full control of Mingora, a week after re-entering the main town  in the Swat valley to dislodge thousands of Taliban fighters,  the military said yesterday.

Recapturing Mingora, 130 km (80 miles) northwest of  Islamabad, would raise the prospect that some of more than 2  million people who have fled the conflict zone could soon begin  to go home, alleviating a humanitarian crisis.

“It’s very good that Mingora city has come under the full  control of the security forces,” military spokesman  Major-General Athar Abbas told a news conference.
The United States and other Western allies have been  heartened by the army’s show of resolve. There had been fears  for the security of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons if the Taliban  threat had been allowed to spread any closer to the capital.

Around 300,000 people lived in Mingora until the Taliban  occupied the town in early May when the army first launched an  offensive in Swat, an alpine valley in the northwest.
The security forces have secured an area of up to 70 km (44  miles) north of Mingora, including the town of Bahrain, Abbas  said, though before the news conference he told Reuters there  were still pockets of resistance on the outskirts of Mingora.

Abbas said medical teams and food supplies had arrived in  Mingora, which had been cut off since the start of the month. Gas supplies were restored, but the electricity grid needed  repair, and the spokesman said it would take at least two weeks  to restore amenities.

Abbas said 1,217 militants had been killed since the  fighting began in late April, while 81 soldiers had been killed,  and 250 wounded.
There are no independent casualty estimates available.

The mass exodus from Swat and the neighbouring regions of  Lower Dir and Buner, where fighting had broken out in mid-April,  prompted United Nations warnings of a long-term humanitarian  crisis.

The UN has pleaded for international support for a $543  million fund to help Pakistan cope.
Almost 90 per cent of the displaced people have been offered  shelter by families in neighbouring peaceful areas, while the  rest have headed for the camps that have sprung up around towns  like Mardan and Swabi.

There are fears of disease breaking out as summer  temperatures soar on the plains below the northwestern  mountains.
The army initially estimated the militants had around 5,000  men in Swat, but later said there were only up to 2,000 hardcore  fighters. Some 15,000 troops, backed by artillery and air power,  were taking part in the offensive, according to the military.

The government first ordered the army into action after  Taliban fighters moved south from their Swat stronghold into  Buner, a valley just 100 km (60 miles) from Islamabad.
Islamist militants have carried out a series of bomb and gun  attacks in Pakistani cities during the last few days, in a bid  to take the heat off their comrades retreating in Swat.