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US drone strike kills 18 insurgents

Published: 12 Oct 2012 - 01:59 am | Last Updated: 07 Feb 2022 - 12:45 am

PESHAWAR: A US drone attack yesterday killed 18 insurgents -- mostly Afghans -- at a militant compound in Pakistan’s tribal region near the northwestern border with Afghanistan, officials said.

It was the second US missile strike reported in as many days in the northwest, considered a stronghold of the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

The attack comes as Pakistan is in shock over the Taliban’s attempted assassination of a 14-year-old child rights activist the other day.

“US drones fired four missiles on a militant compound and initial reports say 11 militants have died,” local administration official Khushal Khan said in Orakzai district.

He said most of the dead were Afghans. 

Six other people were wounded, he said. A security official confirmed the attack and said the death toll may rise.

The compound was located in the Baland Khel area on the border between Orakzai and North Waziristan, a Pakistani intelligence official said on condition of anonymity.

Militants had sealed off the flattened building and were recovering bodies, he said.

The building belonged to Maulvi Shakirullah, a commander in the forces of Pakistani warlord Hafiz Gul Bahadur.

Bahadur is an ally of the Al Qaeda linked Haqqani network blamed by the Americans for a string of high-profile attacks in Afghanistan.

On Wednesday a US drone strike targeting another compound in North Waziristan killed five fighters, according to Pakistani officials.

The covert US attacks are unpopular in Pakistan, where the government calls them a violation of sovereignty, but American officials believe they are a vital weapon against Islamist militants.

Last week, cricket legend turned politician Imran Khan led thousands of supporters in a motorcade. The group marched from the capital Islamabad to the edge of the tribal belt to protest against the US strikes.

Human rights activists have said Tuesday’s shooting of 14-year-old Malala Yousafzai in the former Taliban stronghold of the Swat valley should be a wake-up call to whose who advocate appeasement or peace with the Taliban.

AFP