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Air strikes kill 15 Taliban in Pakistan: officials

Source AFP
Last Updated: Sun, Mar 21, 2010 19:20 hrs

Air strikes killed 15 Taliban in restive Pakistani northwestern tribal areas on Sunday, where militants beheaded three tribesmen accusing them of spying for the United States.

Pakistan's rugged tribal regions have been wracked by violence since becoming a stronghold for hundreds of Taliban and Al-Qaeda rebels who fled across the border to escape the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in late 2001.

Separately, a bomb targeting a senior police official killed three people in southwestern Baluchistan province and another bomb damaged an oil tanker carrying fuel for NATO forces stationed in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Five of the militants were killed in air strikes on a village in Orakzai tribal district, where militants fleeing a military operation in South Waziristan tribal district have taken refuge.

"Two jet fighters carried out air strikes at a militant hideout at Ghiljo. Five militants were killed," a senior paramilitary official told AFP.

In a second air strike in Kurram, another tribal district, 10 militants were killed, the official and local administration chief Fazal Qadir said.

The death toll could not be verified by independent sources as the area is under military operations.

In North Waziristan, another tribal district and known as a hot bed of Taliban, militants Sunday beheaded three tribesmen they accused of spying for US forces stationed across the border in Afghanistan.

"Notes found with the bodies said the men were killed for spying for the US," tribal police official Nisar Khan told AFP.

Khan said the Taliban accused the three dead men of killing "several Taliban and ordinary people".

A local security official confirmed the incident.

Islamist militants frequently kidnap and kill local tribesmen accusing them of spying for the Pakistani government or US forces, who are battling a Taliban-led insurgency in war-torn neighbouring Afghanistan.

Elsewhere, a remote-controlled bomb attached to a bicycle killed three people and wounded 14 others in Quetta city, capital of the province of Baluchistan.

The blast, which targeted a senior policeman, occurred on a main road in Quetta.

It killed the senior policeman's driver and a security guard as they drove past, but the policeman was not in the car at the time, police official Hamid Shakeel told AFP.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but similar bombings have been blamed on separatist, secular tribal rebels in Baluchistan.

A timed bomb meanwhile planted on an oil tanker carrying fuel for NATO forces in Afghanistan exploded near the southwestern border town of Chaman, leaking fuel but causing no casualties, police said.



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