Mar 16 2008
Many die in Pakistan missile strike
Global
By Agencies   
ImageAt least 12 people have been killed, including eight foreign fighters, in a missile strike on a house in a restive Pakistani tribal area known as a safe haven for al Qaeda and Taliban groups.

The attack on Sunday took place in the village of Shahnawaz Kheil Dhoog, near the town of Wana in the South Waziristan region on the Afghan border.
 
"Eight foreigners and four of their supporters were killed," a district government official, who declined to be identified, said.
 
The nationality of the foreigners was not known but some residents of the area said Arabs were among the dead.
 
A military official said earlier that armed groups were believed to have been hiding at the house and seven of them were killed and several wounded.

Local officials and the official Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) news agency said there were 16 dead, while state-run Pakistan Television gave a toll of 20 fatalities.

It was not clear who fired the missiles but villagers said they had heard the sound of a pilot less drone in the sky before the blasts.

US forces have used drones to fire missiles at armed groups on the Pakistani side of the border several times in recent years.

Major General Athar Abbas, Pakistani military spokesman, said there were reports of blasts and some casualties in the area and the military was checking.

Abbas also said Pakistani forces had not carried out any operation in the area and he did not know who carried out the strike or what type of weapon was used.

Neither US nor Pakistani authorities officially confirm US missile attacks on Pakistani territory, which would be an infringement of Pakistani sovereignty.

Pakistan, an important US ally despite widespread public opposition to the US-led campaign against al-Qaeda and the Taliban, says foreign troops would never be allowed to operate on its territory.

Al-Qaeda haven

Many al Qaeda members, including Uzbeks, Arabs and Taliban took refuge in North and South Waziristan, as well as in other areas on the Pakistani side of the border after US-led forces ousted the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2001.

From sanctuaries in the lawless border belt, the Taliban have orchestrated their offensives against the Afghan government and the US and NATO forces supporting it.

Increasingly, so-called Pakistani Taliban have been mounting attacks in Pakistani towns and cities, many aimed at security forces and other government targets.

In the latest bomb attack, a Turkish woman was killed and five Americans were among 11 people wounded in a blast at a restaurant popular with foreigners in the capital, Islamabad, on Saturday night.

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