ISLAMABAD: A suicide bomber killed 14 police cadets in a town in Pakistan’s northwestern Swat
Valley on Sunday, officials said.
“The policemen were being given training in Mingora town when a suicide bomber entered the ground and blew himself up near the
recruits, killing 14 of them,” Swat police chief Qazi Ghulam Farooq said. He blamed Taleban militants, saying that the bomber was a
young boy. “None other than the Taleban are involved in the attack,” he added.
Mian Iftkhar, information minister of the North Western Frontier Province, told Arab News over telephone from Peshawar: “Most of
the militants have been eliminated and their command and control system destroyed but some underground elements are carrying out
isolated acts of terrorism to send a message that they were present.”
Answering a question, he said he cannot rule out the possibility of more such attacks, but said “terrorists have been either
eliminated or scattered.”
A local police official said a curfew had been imposed in Mingora, adding troops and police were patrolling the town and people
quickly shut their businesses in fear of more bombings. It was the first major attack in Mingora since the military claimed last
month to have cleared the valley of Taleban militants, paving the way for residents who had fled the area to avoid the fighting to
begin returning home.
Pakistan in April launched a punishing military offensive against the Taleban in the northwest,
targeting the rebels in the districts of Swat, Buner and Lower Dir after the militants advanced closer to the capital
Islamabad.
The military push forced 1.9 million civilians from their homes, most seeking refuge with relatives and the rest packing into
refugee camps, creating a humanitarian crisis for impoverished Pakistan.
Last month, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani announced that the military had “eliminated” extremists in the northwest and
according to government and UN statistics, 1.6 million displaced people have returned home. Gilani’s government has announced steps
to reconstruct property destroyed during the military operation and action to alleviate poverty in the area under a comprehensive
package.
Swat slipped out of government control after radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah mounted a violent campaign in which his followers
beheaded opponents, burned schools and fought against government troops.
Pakistan says more than 1,930 militants and over 170 security personnel have been killed in the government offensive, but the death
tolls are impossible to verify independently.
The military has now turned its attention to the lawless nearby tribal belt, the heartland of Pakistan’s umbrella organization
Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP), which is allegedly linked to Al-Qaeda. But skirmishes continue in Swat and Buner, raising fears
that the Taleban are regrouping in the mountains, a tactic militants have adopted after government action in the past.
Pakistani authorities have also advocated the establishment of local militia in the northwest to try and keep the Taleban at bay,
amid reports that the fighters have simply melted into the mountains.
Fazlullah meanwhile remains at large.
Separately, the military said on Sunday in a statement that it continued search and clearance operations in Swat and Malakand and
had arrested 40 suspected militants.
Suicide bomber kills 14 police cadets
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