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Pakistan searches for reported wreck of US drone

Pakistani authorities searched for the possible wreckage of an American pilotless drone reported to have crashed in a northwestern militant stronghold, the military's top spokesman said.

Updated on: Mar 08, 2009 02:21 PM IST
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Pakistani authorities searched on Sunday for the possible wreckage of an American pilotless drone reported to have crashed in a northwestern militant stronghold, the military's top spokesman said.

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HT Image

The CIA is believed to operate the drones, which have been used in an escalated US campaign of missile strikes against Al-Qaeda and Taliban targets in Pakistan's remote northwest regions bordering Afghanistan. The US rarely discusses the missile attacks and an American military spokesman in Afghanistan declined to comment on Saturday's reports of a downed drone.

The reports came from Angoor Ada village in South Waziristan, a tribal region where the main Pakistani Taliban leader, Baitullah Mehsud, is based. Tribesmen, soldiers, intelligence agents and informants were hunting for possible aircraft remains in the rough terrain.

"We haven't found any wreckage, but we are still searching," Pakistan army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas said on Sunday morning. Haibib Wazir, who runs a telephone center in Angoor Ada, said he did not hear any shooting Saturday, despite speculation that militants might have fired at a drone.

He said he encountered soldiers and tribesmen who came back empty-handed after searching the thick, wooded area for the wrecked drone Saturday. They could "make money by handing that wreckage to the Taliban," Wazir said.

Pakistani militants have been blamed for the November attacks in Mumbai that killed 164 people, and Pakistan has acknowledged at least part of the attack was planned on its soil. The secretary-general of Interpol, on a visit to Islamabad on Sunday, noted that Pakistan has agreed to provide DNA evidence from its probe into the Mumbai attack to check against the international police agency's databases.

Ronald Noble said Indian cooperation was critical. "In order for these comparisons to be complete, India will be required to send Interpol the DNA profiles that they have obtained in their investigation as well," Noble said at a news conference. Late Saturday in Mohmand, suspected Taliban fighters attacked security forces in the Salam Koroona area, killing 13 tribal police officers, government official Rasul Khan said.

The US has praised Pakistan's military offensives in the tribal areas, but it is concerned about Pakistani efforts to negotiate peace with Taliban fighters in the nearby Swat Valley. As part of those talks, the government has agreed to enforce Islamic law in the valley, a one-time tourist haven. On Saturday, officials announced they would release 12 Taliban prisoners as part of the talks.

 
Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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