Pakistanis secure Swat town; clashes in other area

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) – Pakistani forces consolidated  their hold on the main town in the Swat valley yesterday and  began trucking supplies to 40,000 civilians stranded there, as  fighting flared in South Waziristan on the Afghan border.

The army said it had captured Mingora on Saturday and troops  were out on patrol yesterday.

“Mingora has been fully secured and relief activities have  started,” the army said in a statement. “Security forces are  patrolling in all the important areas of Mingora.”

Pakistan has been carrying out its most concerted offensive  yet against an expanding Taliban insurgency.

The focus of the Pakistani fighting since late April has  been in the former tourist valley of Swat, 120 km (80 miles)  northwest of Islamabad, which the Taliban turned into a bastion  as authorities alternated between inconclusive military action  and peace pacts.

Tension has also been rising in South Waziristan, a major al  Qaeda and Taliban stronghold, with military officials saying an  offensive was likely there after Swat was secured.

The United States and the Afghan government have long been  pressing Pakistan to root militants out of South Waziristan and  other enclaves on the Afghan border, from where the Taliban  direct their Afghan war.

Militants attacked a paramilitary force camp near the town  of Jandola, 80 km (50 miles) east of Wana, the main town in  South Waziristan, late on Saturday and fighting went on for  hours, security officials said.

“They carried out a very serious attack … It was repulsed  after a heavy exchange of fire,” said military spokesman  Major-General Athar Abbas.

Up to 15 militants and three soldiers were killed, he said.

Ten militants and four soldiers were killed in another clash  in South Waziristan when militants ambushed a military convoy  late on Saturday, the military said.

Exodus

Militant violence has surged in Pakistan since mid-2007,  with attacks on security forces, as well as on government and  Western targets.

The militants have responded to the Swat offensive with  eight bomb attacks in various towns and cities and they have  threatened more. Main cities are on alert.

The offensive also sparked an exodus of about 2.4 million  people, according to government figures, and the country faces a  long-term humanitarian crisis. The United Nations has pleaded  for contributions for a $543 million fund to help.

Bomb attacks in cities and the plight of the displaced could  undermine public support for the offensive but the government  and military say they are determined to defeat the Taliban in  Swat.

The military said it had distributed 25 tonnes of relief  goods for 40,000 people stranded in Mingora, which usually has a  population of 300,000.

The military also urged civilians to leave the town of  Charbagh, about 15 km (10 miles) north of Mingora, and lifted a  curfew there and in Mingora and thousands of people left the two  towns.

“We have to flee. I don’t know what will happen tomorrow,”  Mingora resident Mohammad Nisar told Reuters.