The Borneo Post

Roadside bomb kills eight in northwest Pakistan

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan: A bomb killed the former head of a progovernm­ent militia and seven others in northweste­rn Pakistan, officials said Wednesday, in an attack claimed by the local Taliban.

The blast happened Tuesday night in Kabal town in the Swat valley, which was largely ruled by the Pakistan Taliban during a 2007-2009 insurgency.

For years Islamabad encouraged tribal vigilante forces known as peace committees to defend their villages against militants.

Most have been disbanded since the insurgency was largely crushed and security improved across the country.

Swat district police officer Zahid Nawaz Marwat told AFP that former peace committee head Idrees Khan was killed when his pick-up truck was hit by a roadside bomb.

Another local police official confirmed the death toll, which included two local policemen, two private guards and three labourers.

The attack was claimed by the outlawed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), who said Khan was involved in the killing their members.

The group also claimed responsibi­lity for a clash with Pakistani military in which three soldiers were killed Tuesday in Kurram district, bordering Afghanista­n.

The TTP declared an indefinite ceasefire in June to facilitate peace talks being brokered by Afghanista­n, but there have been regular clashes since then despite both sides saying the truce was still on.

Since the Taliban returned to power in Afghanista­n last year Islamabad has regularly complained of attacks by the TTP, especially along their porous frontier.

The Pakistan and Afghanista­n Taliban are separate groups, but share a common ideology.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Rescue workers carry the body of a blast victim into an ambulance following an overnight bomb blast in Pakistan’s northwest Swat valley.
— AFP photo Rescue workers carry the body of a blast victim into an ambulance following an overnight bomb blast in Pakistan’s northwest Swat valley.

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