07 June 2009

The worm turns

The AP has an article about violence in the Middle East, but not what you might think:
Hundreds of Pakistanis banded together to attack Taliban strongholds in a troubled northwest region to avenge a deadly homicide bombing at a local mosque, a top government official said Sunday. The incident underscored a swing in the national mood toward a more anti-Taliban stance— a shift coupled with a recent surge in homicide attacks as the military wages an offensive against the Taliban in the Swat Valley.
Some 400 villagers from Upper Dir district's Haya Gai area, where a homicide bomber killed 33 worshippers at a mosque on Friday, formed a militia and attacked five villages in the neighboring Dhok Darra area, said Atif-ur-Rehman, the district coordination officer. The citizens' militia has occupied three of the villages and is trying to push the Taliban out of the other two. Some twenty houses suspected of harboring Taliban were destroyed, he said. At least four militants were killed, he said.
The government has in the past encouraged local citizens to set up militias, known as lashkars, to oust Taliban fighters. "It is something very positive that tribesmen are standing against the militants. It will discourage the miscreants," Rehman said.
The surge in homicide attacks reached Pakistan's capital late Saturday when a man wearing an explosive-laden jacket attacked a police compound, but was shot down before he could enter the main building. Two officers died and six others were wounded, police said. The assault aligned with a Taliban threat made ten days earlier that militants would strike major cities across Pakistan in retaliation for the military's month-old offensive to oust the Taliban from the northwest's Swat Valley.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack at the police emergency response center in a residential Islamabad neighborhood. Waquar Shah, an officer on duty at the center when it was attacked, said a man wearing a heavy jacket was spotted as he jumped over a wall at the center into a courtyard. "He jumped in from the rear wall, then ran toward the offices," Shah said. "One of our guys opened fire on him and he fell and blew up." Senior police commander Tahir Aalam said two officers were killed and six others were wounded.
The offensive in Swat is seen as a test of Pakistan's resolve to take on militants challenging the government in the region bordering Afghanistan. More than 1,300 militants and 105 soldiers have died so far during the offensive, the military says. The U.S. supports the Swat offensive, hoping it will eliminate a potential sanctuary for al-Qaeda and Taliban militants implicated in attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan.
"Hey, Mister Taliban, tally me some virgins..." (Rico says he can never resist a pun.)

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