War on Terror
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Security forces
kill school massacre planner in Pakistan shootout
Published December 26, 2014
The alleged planner of the deadly massacre at a school
in Pakistan last week has been killed in a gun battle.
Security forces – acting on intelligence information--
stormed the Bara area Thursday night and engaged in an hour-long shootout with
the militant, known only as “Saddam,” a top Pakistani government official in
the Khyber tribal region said. Khyber borders the northwestern city of
Peshawar.
Saddam was killed in the raid, and his six accomplices
were injured and arrested, head of Khyber police administration Ali Shah said.
Shah said local authorities are interrogating the six
captured militants.
Saddam helped plan the Dec. 16 attack-- when militants
strapped with explosives broke into the military-run school in Peshawar,
killing 148 people, 132 of them children.
Saddam was also involved in attacks on health workers
giving polio vaccinations in the Peshawar valley.
Meanwhile, a suspected U.S. drone fired missiles at
two compounds in Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region Friday, killing at
least seven alleged militants.
Four intelligence officials said the early morning
strikes hit the compounds of the Punjabi Taliban and a group of Uzbek militants
in the Shawal area of North Waziristan.
Two missiles struck the compound of the Punjabi
Taliban in the village of Kund, killing four militants, the officials said.
They said the compound was being used as a training facility by the group's
commander, Qari Imran, but it was unclear whether Imran himself was present at
the time of attack. The officials all spoke on condition of anonymity because
they were not authorized to brief the media.
Minutes later, another drone-launched missile struck
the compound of a group of Uzbek militants in the village of Mangrotai, killing
three alleged militants, the officials said.
Drone strikes are largely unpopular in Pakistan where
many consider them a violation of the country's sovereignty and resent the
collateral damage caused to Pakistani civilians. But the U.S. insists these
attacks are effective to eliminate militants in areas inaccessible to the
Pakistani military.
The
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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