PAKISTAN’S GOVERNMENT declared an end to peace initiatives with Taliban insurgents controlling Swat last night, signalling the start of a major military operation to drive the militants from the valley.
In a televised address, prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani said the army was being called into Swat, a tourist haven turned Taliban stronghold, “to restore the honour and dignity of our homeland”.
“We will destroy those elements who have destroyed the peace of our people and our nation,” he said.
The announcement, coming after a day of fierce air bombardment against militant positions, is expected to signal the start of a ground offensive similar to the one already under way in neighbouring Dir and Buner districts, where the army claims to have killed more than 200 militants in the past two weeks.
It will also exacerbate a humanitarian crisis expected to affect more than one million people. Tens of thousands have already fled Swat and the government expects the total to reach 500,000, adding to the 550,000 displaced by previous fighting in the North West Frontier province.
Mr Gilani appealed for international aid to deal with the humanitarian crisis and to “help enhance the capacity of our law-enforcing institutions”. He also appealed to Muslim clerics to support the government action “and tell the world that Islam does not sanction suicide bombing”.
It promises to be a bloody battle marked by urban warfare, which has rarely occurred in clashes with the Taliban. They have dug into positions across Mingora, the main town in the valley, where helicopter gunships pounded houses under militant control on Wednesday.
Several Taliban were killed when a rocket destroyed a lawyer’s house, while a mortar destroyed a house in nearby Matta village, killing five people including two children. The death toll from the violence was thought to run into dozens.
During the afternoon, thousands of Mingora residents took advantage of a break in curfew to flee; some residents estimated that up to 80 per cent of the population had left.
On one street, Abdul Qayuum (61) sat on a suitcase by the roadside as he waited for his son to find a vehicle that would transport them out of the area. “We want to leave as quickly as we can,” he said.
The Taliban also took advantage of the curfew to lay mines around the city. Commanders wearing face masks roamed the streets, issuing orders through walkie-talkies. One commander scorned the Islamabad government as an American stooge. “We are Muslims and we want an Islamic system. Who the hell are they [America] to object?” said Marwan (30).
The Taliban promised the army a bloody reception in Mingora and boasted of having planted hundreds of mines across the city. “The security forces cannot even budge in this area,” he said.
Sajjad Khan (22) said he knew of 14 funerals for civilians in his district of the city. “Now there is fear everywhere and everyone is leaving.”
The violence coincided with the visit to Washington of president Asif Ali Zardari, where the army’s newly aggressive stance against the Taliban has been loudly welcomed by previously critical Obama administration officials.
The US defence secretary, Robert Gates, said the Taliban had overreached in pushing into Buner and their action had served as an “alarm call” to the Zardari government. Speaking in Kabul, Mr Gates said there was very little chance of the militants gaining control of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. – (Guardian service; additional reporting Reuters)