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Leave Pak or die: Musharraf to militants

None | ByUnited News of India, Lahore
Mar 24, 2006 11:35 AM IST

Musharraf has survived several Al-Qaeda-inspired assassination attempts ever since he sided with Washington.

Foreign militants hiding in Pakistan should either leave or face annihilation, President Pervez Musharraf said in a strongly worded speech on Thursday marking a national holiday.

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Pakistan has captured or killed hundreds of Al-Qaeda members since Musharraf joined a US-led war on terrorism after the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.

But security forces are still battling remnants of Al-Qaeda and their sympathisers among tribes on the border with Afghanistan, and Osama bin Laden is widely believed to be hiding somewhere in Pakistan along with his deputy Ayman al-Zawahri.

"These foreign terrorists are not only spreading terrorism in Pakistan, but in the rest of the world," Musharraf told a rally that also marked the centenary of the formation of the ruling Muslim League party during the British Raj.

"I want to warn them, that they should leave Pakistan. Go away or we will finish them off," Musharraf said in an open air address beside a national monument in the eastern city of Lahore.

Musharraf has survived several Al-Qaeda-inspired assassination attempts since he sided with Washington, and he spoke from a dais, protected by a transparent, bullet-proof screen.

Nevertheless, Pakistan's commitment, particularly with regard to stamping out Taliban fighters still running an insurgency in Afghanistan and jihadi groups fighting in Kashmir, often comes under critical scrutiny from neighbours and Western governments alike.

US President George Bush, who counts Musharraf as an important ally, said one of the main purposes of his visit to Islamabad earlier this month was to check that Pakistan remained fully committed to the war on terrorism.

Over the years Pakistan became a refuge for Islamist militants not only belonging to al Qaeda and remnants of the Taliban militia ousted from Afghanistan, but also from Chechnya and Central Asia.

Many settled in the semi-autonomous Pashtun tribal lands straddling the border with Afghanistan. The Pakistan army has deployed up to 80,000 troops in the tribal lands but is still struggling to root out militants.

Earlier this month around 200 tribesmen in North Waziristan were killed in clashes with the army after answering a call to arms by militant Muslim clerics following a Pakistan special forces' air and ground assault on an Al-Qaeda camp.

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