Pakistan claims 50 Taliban slain in raids

Published: Aug. 24, 2008 at 6:36 AM

SWAT VALLEY, Pakistan, Aug. 24 (UPI) -- Pakistani soldiers, responding to an earlier powerful suicide bomb blast, pounded Taliban positions in the Swat Valley, killing 50 militants, officials say.

The initial blast shook the village of Charbagh Saturday when an explosives-laden jeep rammed into the local police station, killing four policemen and injuring 20 others. The government responded, killing with the Taliban's top commanders along with foreign fighters in the restive North West Frontier province region, Pakistan Dawn reported Sunday.

The offensive left 10 army soldiers dead and seven others injured, officials said. An army spokesman told the newspaper that several militant hideouts, including the Taliban's command and control center in the village of Kabal, were destroyed. He vowed to continue the operation until the government's writ is restored in the lawless valley.

Taliban Spokesman Muslim Khan told Dawn the militant group had carried out the Charbagh suicide attack in reaction to the killing of 14 militants in Doaba, Hangu.

"It is only a beginning and more attacks will come if the operation is not stopped in Swat," he said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NBA: Phoenix 120, Minnesota 95 (15 min)
NBA: Denver 128, New York 125 (35 min)
COL BKB: Portland 61, Minnesota 56 (36 min)
NHL: Phoenix 5, Dallas 2 (38 min)
NBA: Dallas 113, Indiana 92 (57 min)
NHL: St. Louis 3, Nashville 1 (59 min)
NBA: Washington 94, Miami 84 (59 min)
fark
Purse-snatcher tries to rob "Geek Love" author Katherine Dunn, learns the hard way that authors...
Recently divorced woman sees Jesus on her iron, displaying to the world why she was recently divorced...
When running a pot farm out of your home, you should resist the urge to call the cops if someone...
10 beers so weird even Drew wouldn't drink them. Yeah, they're THAT weird
Photoshop this... umm, whatever this is... at the AMAs
NASA: Evidence of life on Mars