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Published: 22 Mar 2013 - 04:02 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 02:06 pm

PESHAWAR: Pakistan is stepping up an offensive to dislodge the Taliban from a key stronghold to safeguard May’s general election and crackdown on militants behind a wave of attacks.

The northwestern Tirah Valley, hemmed in by steep mountains and replete with numerous caves, has offered Pakistan’s umbrella Tehreek-e-Taliban a new base in the tribal district of Khyber beyond the reach of ground troops.

Long linked to the drugs trade and militia activities, with an influx of militants evicted from elsewhere, it poses a new threat to nearby Nato supply lines and to Peshawar, a city of 2.5 million and a key electoral battleground.

There in Tirah, the Taliban have also formed a troubling alliance with the once hostile Lashkar-e-Islam, a militia run by warlord Mangal Bagh, to oppose the military’s efforts to dislodge them through air strikes and shelling.

Elections on May 11 are billed as Pakistan’s first democratic transition between one elected civilian government and another, but concerns about security are casting a shadow over preparations.

The campaign also marks the first time that parties are allowed to contest the vote in the tribal belt, a reform introduced by the outgoing government in a bid to clamp down on militancy.

“We have intensified our operation,” a senior security official said. “Elections are approaching, Khyber is an important place, we have to restrict them and push them back,” he added.

Fighter jets are targeting safe houses in Tirah. Troops, who surround the valley from the outside, are also shelling, the official and residents said.

On Monday, four people were killed when a suicide bomber posing as a clerk and an accompanying gunman attacked the main courts complex in Peshawar.

Last month, militants attacked the office of the top government official for Khyber, Mutahir Zeb, killing six people as political leaders met to discuss a strategy for peaceful polls. Zeb was unhurt.

Also in February, a suicide bomber tried to kill provincial chief minister Ameer Haider Khan Hoti two months after his deputy, Bashir Bilour, was assassinated in Peshawar.

Security has declined markedly in Pakistan since the last election in 2008. During that campaign, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto was assassinated at a rally in Rawalpindi, an attack blamed on the Pakistani Taliban.

Officials link some recent attacks to Khyber and fear that Tirah could pose an ongoing threat as the electoral campaign heats up.

Although the military pushed the Taliban out of the Swat valley in 2009, the government has been unable or unwilling to crack down on the plethora of Islamist militant networks blamed for violence in Pakistan, Afghanistan and India.

Religious violence has reached dizzying levels, most recently against the Shiite Muslim minority. Karachi, the largest city, is also suffering from record killings linked to political and ethnic tensions.

The air and shelling offensive is concentrated on Tirah, the town of Bara and Ghaljo, which would be the militants’ escape route into the neighbouring district of Orakzai. The army has also imposed strict curfews.

AFP