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US, Pakistan to keep up joint Afghan border ops: Pentagon

Pakistan rounds up 1,500 in emergency crackdown
Pakistan has detained about 1,500 people in a police crackdown since President Pervez Musharraf declared an emergency in the nuclear-armed nation at the weekend, police sources said Monday. A senior police official in Punjab province said 700 people have been detained or arrested, the majority of them lawyers, while police in southern Sindh province put their figure at 500. The rest of the detentions were in the capital Islamabad, North West Frontier Province and southwestern Baluchistan, the sources said. The massive round-up also included political leaders and workers, and civil society and human rights activists. "Police have detained potential troublemakers, law-breakers and those who defied a ban on rallies," interior ministry spokesman Javed Cheema told AFP. He said he did not have firm figures of the total number of arrests.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 5, 2007
Washington and Islamabad will keep up joint military operations along the border with Afghanistan despite the turmoil rocking Pakistan, US defense officials said Monday.

"As far as I know, with respect to our borders operations coordination, our military operations, that continues. That said, I wouldn't want to speculate for the future," said Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman.

"We are reviewing all of our assistance programs, but we need to be mindful not to hurt the counter-terrorism relations," he added, repeating the same message given by US Defense Secretary Robert Gates earlier Monday during a visit to Beijing.

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf on Saturday imposed emergency rule on his nuclear-armed nation of 160 million people, citing growing Islamic extremism and hostile judges.

Top US officials reacted swiftly saying Washington's aid to the staunch war-on-terrorism ally was under review, but warned against expecting a freeze or cuts in assistance to battle Islamist extremists and Al-Qaeda fighters.

And Washington warned on Monday that ties between the two countries would not remain the same unless Musharraf reverses course on the state of emergency and steers Pakistan back to democracy.

Washington has accorded Islamabad, a key ally in the "war on terror," some 11 billion dollars in financial and military aid since 2001.

Whitman did not specify which aid programs were under review.

Funding for Pakistan's operations under operation Enduring Freedom represent "about 80 million dollars a month," he said. "So far 5.3 billions have been repaid to Pakistan" since the beginning of the operation.

The Pakistani military is also due to receive some 300 million dollars for the 2008 fiscal year, as well as about two million dollars designated for military training.

Other US assistance goes towards funding anti-drugs and weapons non-proliferation programs.

Islamabad also benefits from sales of American arms, Whitman said, adding that in 2006 the US Congress approved the sale of 36 F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan, although he was unsure if they have arrived yet.

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Musharraf tightens grip under emergency rule
Islamabad (AFP) Nov 4, 2007
Pakistani forces deployed around key state buildings and rounded up leading critics Sunday as President Pervez Musharraf sought to shore up his flagging grip on power by imposing emergency rule.

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