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Pakistan searches for missing envoy, nuke officials

This undated photograph taken from a handout ID photo from the Pakistan Embassy in Kabul shows missing Pakistani ambassador to Afghanistan, Tariq Azizuddin. Pakistani authorities searched for the country's missing ambassador to Afghanistan Tariq Azizuddin on February 12 after he was feared abducted in a troubled tribal area where Taliban militants are active.The diplomat's disappearance on February 11 highlighted the spiralling insecurity ahead of crucial elections next week in the nuclear-armed nation, a key ally in US efforts against Islamic extremism. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Islamabad (AFP) Feb 12, 2008
Pakistani authorities searched for the country's abducted ambassador to Afghanistan and two kidnapped nuclear experts on Tuesday as insecurity mounted ahead of crucial elections next week.

The abductions happened on Monday near the country's rugged northwestern border with Afghanistan, where Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants are waging an insurgency against the US-allied government in Islamabad.

The Pakistani envoy, Tariq Azizuddin, was heading to the Afghan capital Kabul with his driver on Monday when they disappeared in the lawless Khyber tribal district, officials said.

"We have launched efforts for his recovery. It now appears clear that he has been kidnapped," Rasool Khan Wazir, chief administrative official in Khyber, told AFP.

"We are trying to collect information.... We cannot disclose our strategy but we are hopeful we will find out where he has been kept and who is involved."

Security officials said tribal authorities were scouring the rugged area, the site of the famed Khyber Pass linking Afghanistan and Pakistan, and had closed the main road between the two countries.

Pakistan's embassy in Kabul said it last had contact with the ambassador on Monday morning as he travelled from the northwestern city of Peshawar into the tribal area.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Tuesday he hoped for Azizuddin's quick rescue from "terrorists."

"May God make it happen that our brother and neighbouring country, Pakistan, is able to rescue him from the abductors, the terrorists," Karzai said.

Azizuddin is the most senior of several government officials to have been abducted in the mountainous tribal belt. Blame has either fallen on Islamist militants or criminal kidnap gangs.

Police on Tuesday confirmed that two technicians from the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission had also been abducted by masked men in the country's northwest.

The officials were on a routine visit to conduct a geological survey for mineral exploration in a mountainous area which adjoins Pakistan's lawless tribal regions, local police chief Akbar Nasir said.

"We don't know if the abductors were militants or members of some criminal gang," he said.

Pakistan's tribal zone has been wracked by fighting between government forces and Islamist militants linked to Al-Qaeda and the Taliban, although Khyber has been one of the more peaceful regions.

Militants had previously kidnapped around 250 Pakistani soldiers in the tribal zone of South Waziristan. They were reportedly released in exchange for several rebels held by Pakistani authorities.

Meanwhile, Pakistani officials were interrogating a senior figure in Afghanistan's Taliban movement who was captured near the southwestern border between the two countries on Monday, police said.

Mullah Mansoor Dadullah, the brother of the Islamist militia's slain military chief in Afghanistan, was captured along with at least five other militants in a gun battle on Monday.

Dadullah had been responsible for operations against NATO and US-led troops in the southern Afghan province of Helmand.

Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf has accused a key pro-Taliban militant leader, Baitullah Mehsud, of orchestrating December's assassination of opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

Her killing caused the postponement of general elections due in January.

The polls are now scheduled for Monday but the run-up has been hit by further violence, including a blast outside an election candidate's office in southwestern Pakistan on Tuesday that wounded nine people, police said.

"Someone parked a bicycle outside (candidate Sardar Aslam) Bizenjo's office which exploded during his press conference," local police chief Hamid Shakil said. The candidate was unhurt, he said.

A suicide bombing in the tribal region of North Waziristan that targeted political activists going to an election rally killed several people on Monday.

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US general says Pakistan nukes safe despite rising militancy
Islamabad (AFP) Feb 9, 2008
The chief of the US military said Saturday that Pakistan's atomic weapons were secure despite rising Islamic militancy in the nuclear-armed South Asian country.







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