Top militant leader in North Waziristan threatens to break peace pact with Pakistan government

Saturday, November 12th, 2011 6:37:49 by

Top militant leader in North Waziristan threatens to break peace pact with Pakistan government

The most powerful militant leader in the North Waziristan border region Hafiz Gul Bahadur has threatened to tear up a peace accord and turn his fighters against the government.

Bahadur has an unofficial non-aggression pact with the military, focusing instead on attacking US troops in neighbouring Afghanistan.

Pakistan can’t afford new militant enemies. The army’s hands are full with the Tehrik-e-Taliban (TTP) blamed for many of the suicide bombings across the country.

The militant leader is known to have links with notorious militant groups in the hostile tribal North Waziristan, including the Haqqani network, which has emerged as the most high-profile threat to US forces in Afghanistan.

He criticised government leaders for allowing the United States to conduct drone missile strikes in North Waziristan and said the council of militant groups he heads would no longer hold talks with the government.

 “We have been showing patience because of problems being faced by common people but now the government has also resorted to repression on our common people at the behest of foreigners,” Bahadur, who heads a Pakistani Taliban faction, said in a statement
distributed in North Waziristan.

He accused the Pakistani government of firing mortar bombs and cannons on civilians and demolishing a hospital and other buildings in North Waziristan. Army officials were not immediately available for comment.

Local military officials said “terrorists” had used public buildings to launch rocket attacks at military checkpoints.

 “We are disbanding the jirga (council) set up for talks with the government. If the government resorts to any repressive act in the future then it will also be very difficult for us to show patience,” said Bahadur.

Bahadur, believed to have thousands of fighters, reached a peace agreement with the Pakistani government in 2007. But it has been strained lately.

Pakistan has come under intense pressure to tackle militancy since US Special Forces in May this year killed Osama bin Laden in a Pakistani town, where he had apparently lived for years.

Admiral Mike Mullen said before retiring as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in September that the Haqqani network — blamed for several attacks on US targets in Afghanistan recently — was a “veritable arm” of Pakistani intelligence.

Nonetheless, Islamabad denies the allegation.

The United States wants Pakistan to encourage militants to pursue peace in Afghanistan, and go after groups who don’t cooperate.

But the government must tread cautiously in a country where anti-American sentiment over issues such as the CIA-operated drone campaign runs deep.

Pakistani leaders criticise the drone attacks, saying they play into the hands of militants. But analysts say strikes which kill high-value al Qaeda and Taliban figures would not be possible without help from Pakistani intelligence agencies. 

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