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Taliban claim attacks on NATO supply convoys in Pakistan

Pakistan police seize stolen NATO goods
Islamabad, Pakistan (UPI) Oct 4, 2010 - Pakistani police recovered a cache of stolen NATO supplies, including helicopter parts, medical stretchers and vehicles, hidden in a warehouse near Islamabad. Police detained four people in connection with the missing goods discovered during a night-time raid on the warehouse in the town of Tarnol, near Islamabad. Other material found in the warehouse included wireless sets, heavy-duty generators, divers kits, water bags, shoes and gloves. Also found were several armed personnel carriers. Police said two of the men arrested are being investigated on suspicion of stealing the material from a NATO truck convoy bound for U.S. and other NATO troops in Afghanistan. They are believed to have had jobs with the convoy from which the goods were stolen. The other two men are being investigated for attempting to buy the goods offered to them by the first two men, the transporters. The material is thought to have been bought for sale to Pakistani militants, although the police didn't say if they were Taliban-linked or nationally operating criminal gangs.

"Normally the transporters steal only specific items from the supplies but sometimes they unload the entire containers," a police officer said. "Whenever the entire container is stolen for them, the transporters set (the convoy) on fire on the pretext of a Taliban attack." The latest round-up by police is part of an ongoing battle with Taliban and local criminal gangs who ambush on NATO supply convoys as they travel into bandit areas along the Afghanistan border. Late last month, the Frontier Corps police recovered stolen NATO goods, including guns, laptop computers and land mine sweepers, in the Khyber Agency region, one of eight tribal areas along Pakistan's south west border with Afghanistan. Police spokesman Maj. Fazal-ur-Rehman said the goods had been looted from convoys on their way into Afghanistan and NATO troops. They confiscated around 15 containers in Wazir Dhand and other areas, he said. Fazal said local tribal elders co-operated with police by handing over shopkeepers in whose buildings the goods had been found. However, the police action caused protests by some shop owners who briefly blockaded a road, he said.

One of the worst attacks was a night-time ambush in June when gunmen attacked a convoy outside a depot in the Tarnol area, setting fire to up to 60 trailers in including oil and gasoline tankers, killing seven people, mostly drivers and their co-workers. Also, 80 vehicles were partially damaged, police said at the time. The attackers were thought to Taliban fighters. Pakistani transport unions and associations have voiced their concern over the attack. They claim the government and police aren't doing enough to protect the drivers and union members who man NATO vehicles and who also use their own vehicles under contract to NATO. "We are in mourning," Yusuf Shahwani, president of the All Pakistan Oil Transporters' Association, said after the fatal June attack. "Not a single tanker has left Karachi today for Afghanistan. The government is not serious about the security of the convoys. How can armed men run riot for half an hour in such an area without any response from the security forces?" Around three-quarters of the supplies destined for the 130,000 international troops in Afghanistan are supplied overland from Karachi, a port city on the southern coast of Pakistan.
by Staff Writers
Miranshah, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 4, 2010
Pakistani Taliban on Monday claimed responsibility for two attacks on NATO supply convoys in Pakistan and threatened to carry out more.

"We accept responsibility for the attacks on the NATO supply trucks and tankers," Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) spokesman Azam Tariq told AFP.

"I am talking about attacks both in Sindh and in Islamabad," he said in a telephone call from an undisclosed location.

"We will carry out more such attacks in future. We will not allow the use of Pakistani soil as a supply route for NATO troops based in Afghanistan.

"This is also to avenge drone attacks," he added.

At least three people were killed when about 20 oil tankers loaded with fuel for NATO troops in Afghanistan were attacked and set ablaze near the Pakistani capital overnight, police said.

The attack came as Pakistani authorities continued their own blockade of a main land route for NATO supplies for a fifth consecutive day, in response to a NATO helicopter strike that Islamabad says killed three of its soldiers.

Television pictures showed flames towering from the trucks. The trucks were being filled just outside Islamabad en route to Afghanistan early in the morning when gunmen attacked the convoy with molotov cocktails.

In a similar incident on Friday in the south, heavily armed gunmen set ablaze more than two dozen trucks and tankers carrying fuel for the 152,000-strong foreign force fighting the Taliban-led insurgency.

"Three people have died, eight are injured. They have all received bullet injuries and are mostly drivers and their helpers," police emergency official Mohammad Ahad told AFP by phone after the latest incident.

Police said around a dozen people who attacked the supply tankers fled the scene.

Ambushes of NATO convoys are not uncommon, but are normally concentrated in strongholds of Islamist militants in the lawless northwest.

An administrative official at Torkham, the main border crossing, confirmed the blockade was continuing for a fifth day.

Queues of more than 200 trucks and oil tankers have formed at the border in the northwest tribal area of Kurram as they wait to deliver supplies.

Washington has described Pakistan's tribal belt on the Afghan border as a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda, a hub of militants fighting in Afghanistan and the most dangerous place on Earth.

More than 3,700 people have been killed in the last three years in a series of suicide attacks and bomb explosions in Pakistan, many of them carried out by the Taliban and other Al-Qaeda-linked Islamist extremists.

earlier related report
Three dead as 20 NATO tankers set ablaze in Pakistan
Islamabad (AFP) Oct 4, 2010 - Three people were killed on Monday and up to eight others wounded when about 20 NATO oil tankers were attacked and set ablaze near the Pakistani capital, in the second mass torching in days.

Television pictures showed towering flames springing from the trucks that were filling up just outside Islamabad en route to Afghanistan early in the morning when gunmen attacked the convoy with molotov cocktails.

It follows a similar incident on Friday in the south, when heavily armed gunmen set ablaze more than two dozen trucks and tankers carrying fuel for the 152,000-strong foreign forces fighting the Taliban-led insurgency.

"Three people have died, eight are injured. They have all received bullet injuries and are mostly drivers and their helpers," police emergency official Mohammad Ahad told AFP by telephone.

The unknown number of gunmen fled the scene, Ahad said, and Geo television showed fire brigades spraying the burning tankers that had set nearby trees and bushes ablaze, lighting up the night sky.

Ambushes of NATO convoys are not uncommon, but are normally concentrated in strongholds of Islamist militants in the lawless northwest, where Pakistan has closed a key land crossing into Afghanistan after a cross-border NATO attack.

Mohammad Ilyas, the doctor in charge of emergency care in Rawalpindi civil hospital, said: "We received three dead bodies and seven wounded.

"They all had bullet wounds. Two of them were in serious condition but they are improving and we hope they will be in a stable condition soon."

Islamabad police chief Omar Hayat confirmed the death toll and said the tankers were attacked as they were parked up at the Attock oil refinery outside the capital for refuelling.

"As they were waiting to get the oil, some people opened fire and threw molotov cocktails at the tankers. The security guards retaliated and the gunfire continued for some time," said Hayat.

The assault came after Pakistan on Sunday said the closed transit route will reopen "relatively quickly".

Pakistan blocked the crossing on Thursday after a NATO helicopter strike that Islamabad says killed three of its soldiers. The alliance said it shot back in self-defence.

After a flurry of phone calls and pressure from ally the US, Hussain Haqqani, Pakistan's ambassador to Washington, told CNN's "State of the Union" programme that the crossing would reopen in "less than a week".

"I think the supply line will be open relatively quickly," he said.

He added: "It's not a blockade. It's just a temporary suspension of the convoys moving through.

"I do not expect this blockade to continue for too long."

The Khyber pass at Torkham is on one of the key NATO supply routes through Pakistan into war-torn Afghanistan.

The cross-border raid was the fourth in a week by NATO helicopters pursuing militants into Pakistan, which condemned the action as a serious breach of its sovereignty, threatening to destabilise ties with backer Washington.

A two-member Pakistan team led by Brigadier Usman Khattak, deputy inspector general of the Frontier Corps, travelled to Afghanistan on Saturday to join an investigation into the incident by the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and US officials, an official told AFP.

Queues of more than 200 trucks and oil tankers have formed at the border in the northwest tribal area of Kurram as they wait to deliver supplies.

The envoy Haqqani said that he had received a phone call from General David Petraeus, the US commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan.

"He understands Pakistan has not stopped it as a political retaliation but only to make convoys more secure," Haqqani said, adding the issue was unlikely to cause any permanent damage to future US-Pakistan cooperation.

"Pakistan is an American ally. America depends on Pakistan," Haqqani said.

"We can and do not do everything the Americans think we should do because sometimes we don't have the capacity, sometimes we don't have the means," he said.

Washington has classified Pakistan's tribal belt on the Afghan border as a global headquarters of Al-Qaeda, a hub of militants fighting in Afghanistan and the most dangerous place on Earth.

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