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Pakistan won't extradite Taliban leader

US to supply laser-guided bombs to Pakistan: official
Washington (AFP) March 2, 2010 - The US Air Force plans to deliver 1,000 laser-guided bomb kits to Pakistan this month to help Islamabad in its offensive against militants on the Afghan border, a spokesman said on Tuesday. The Air Force is providing the kits after having delivered 1,000 MK-82 bombs last month to Pakistan's military, Lieutenant Colonel Jeffry Glenn told AFP. The US military assistance underscored Washington's role in backing Pakistan's months-long campaign against Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants. The Pakistani air force was playing "a big part" in operations against the Islamist extremists, Air Force Secretary Michael Donley said. "As they had ramped up operations, they're looking for ways to get additional capability," he told a gathering of defense reporters. Pakistan's air force chief had visited Washington last year and made additional requests for US military assistance, he said.

Donley said the Pentagon had arranged for "expedited" delivery of the MK-82 bombs, which weigh 500 pounds each. The United States also was due to deliver 18 additional F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan in June, outfitted with sophisticated night-vision equipment, Glenn said. Confirmation of the arms deal came as Pakistan on Tuesday revealed a vast Taliban and Al-Qaeda hideout dug into mountains near the Afghan border, captured in an offensive against militants. Pakistan seized the complex in its latest offensive against militants in its semi-autonomous tribal belt, following US pressure on the country to eliminate Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked groups who attack Western troops in Afghanistan. President Barack Obama's administration has pledged stepped up military assistance and development aid to Pakistan, which Washington sees as a vital ally in the fight against Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.
by Staff Writers
Lahore, Pakistan (UPI) Mar 2, 2009
Pakistan will not be sending captured top Afghan Taliban leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar back to Afghanistan, the High Court in Lahore has ruled.

Baradar, considered the most influential Taliban leader, second only to Mullah Muhammad Omar, was arrested in Karachi in mid-February in a secret joint operation by Pakistani and U.S. intelligence forces. It was several days after his capture before news of the arrest was made public.

The Lahore High Court also banned extraditing four other unnamed Taliban chiefs reportedly seized recently, the BBC reported.

The order was in response to a petition filed by a rights activist to prevent the detainees from being sent abroad.

"The high court has ordered that none of the leaders should be handed over to the (United States) or Afghanistan," Tariq Asad, a lawyer handling the petition, told the BBC.

"The court has also said that none, other than Pakistan intelligence or security officials, should be given access to the Taliban leaders," he said.

Details of Baradar's capture "remain murky," The New York Times wrote at the time. But officials said that it had been carried out by Pakistan's military spy agency the Directorate for Inter-Services Intelligence with CIA operatives helping out.

The news that Baradar will not be extradited comes as India's prime minister said he had asked Saudi Arabia's King Abdallah to use his influence to persuade Pakistan to stop abetting terrorists on Indian soil.

"I know Saudi Arabia has close relations with Pakistan," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told reporters on board the special aircraft in which he and his delegation were returning to India after a three-day visit to Saudi Arabia.

"I did discuss Indo-Pakistan relations on a one-to-one basis with (the king)," Singh is quotes as saying by The Times of India.

"I explained to him the role terrorism, aided, abetted and inspired by Pakistan is playing in our country. I did not ask him to do anything other than use his good offices to persuade Pakistan to desist from this path."

The Times report noted that Singh, while addressing the Majlis Al-Shura, the Saudi legislature, said that if Pakistan cooperated with India, no problem would be insurmountable "and we can walk an extra mile to open a new chapter in relations between our two countries."

But Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari was on the offensive even as Singh as retuning from Saudi Arabia.

Zardari said that his country is focusing on strong international alliances, a functioning society and a vibrant economy. He also said, writing in a column in London's Guardian newspaper, that no one should underestimate the resolve of Pakistan to fight terrorists.

"Terrorists do not want Pakistan to succeed," he said. "They want to distract us from preparing for a stable and prosperous future."

Zardari's reassurances can be seen in light of questions being asked by its allies of Pakistan's commitment to arrest terrorist suspects. Some U.S. officials said that Pakistani officials could have arrested Baradar at any time.

However, the participation of Pakistan's spy service suggests a new level of cooperation from Pakistan's leaders, the Times wrote. Even Pakistan's chief of army, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, now says they can no longer support the Taliban in Afghanistan, as they have quietly done for years, without endangering themselves.



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THE STANS
Six NATO troops killed in bloody Afghan day
Kabul (AFP) March 2, 2010
Six NATO soldiers were killed while fighting against Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan on Monday, making it one of the worst days for the international alliance this year, NATO said. A brief announcement from NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) overnight said two foreign soldiers were killed Monday, one by a bomb attack in the south and another in an attack in the east. ... read more







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