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Pakistani Taliban appoint Mehsud's 'successor'

File image: Baitullah Mehsud

British PM meets Petraeus for Afghanistan talks
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown held private talks on Afghanistan with top US military commander General David Petraeus on Friday, Brown's office said. Brown held a private meeting at his home in Scotland with the US central command chief, Downing Street said. The pair discussed Thursday's Afghan presidential elections. Brown is spending his summer holiday at his constituency home in North Queensferry, near Edinburgh. "The prime minister welcomed General Petraeus back to the UK earlier today," a spokesman said. "They had a good meeting and discussed a wide range of issues including the latest situation in Afghanistan and in particular the elections. "General Petraeus took the opportunity to praise the role UK forces are playing in Afghanistan." Petraeus said: "British troops have been in a very tough place and they have done exceedingly well. "It is enormously important we achieve our objective in Afghanistan, and ensure it does not again become a sanctuary for Al-Qaeda and other extremists," he told The Sun newspaper. Britain's Ministry of Defence announced earlier that two British soldiers were killed in an explosion while on a routine foot patrol in southern Afghanistan's Helmand Province. The deaths take the number of British fatalities since the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 to 206. British losses have increased sharply since the start of July when elements of Britain's 9,150-strong force joined with Afghan counterparts to launch an operation against Taliban insurgents in Helmand. The bodies of four soldiers were returned to Britain on Friday. Foreign Secretary David Miliband praised the "enormous bravery" of Afghans who defied Taliban threats and voted. "We were all braced for the worst after the very difficult six weeks in the run-up to the election," he told BBC radio. "The worst did not happen but we don't yet know how good it was in terms of the ability of Afghans to come out and vote. "What's vital is that there is a credible Afghan government to which Afghans can commit their loyalty."
by Staff Writers
Peshawar, Pakistan (AFP) Aug 22, 2009
The Pakistan Taliban have appointed a successor to their feared leader believed to have been killed in a US missile strike, a militant commander said Saturday.

American and Pakistani officials believe Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) chief Baitullah Mehsud was killed earlier this month in a missile attack by US drone aircraft in the lawless South Waziristan tribal district bordering Afghanistan.

Taliban commanders say Mehsud survived but is seriously ill.

TTP deputy and battle-hardened former teacher Maulvi Faqir Mohammad, who announced on Wednesday that he had taken over as acting chief of the group, said a Taliban shura, or council, had made the appointment.

"A Taliban shura has unanimously appointed Hakimullah Mehsud as successor to Baitullah Mehsud," he told AFP by telephone.

"The shura meeting continued for two days and was attended by 22 members," he said.

Residents and intelligence officials in Khar, the main town of Bajaur tribal district, the base of Mohammad, said the militant leader relayed the news of Hakimullah's appointment on his illegal FM radio station.

"The shura has appointed Hakimullah as successor to Baitullah Mehsud. The shura earlier had nominated me as the acting chief but now I will be again deputy chief," an intelligence official quoted Mohammad as saying over the radio.

"I shall continue to be ameer (chief) of TTP in Bajaur," Mohammad said.

Pakistani intelligence officials say TTP spokesman Maulvi Omar, who was arrested this month, has confirmed that Mehsud was killed in a CIA strike on his father-in-law's house on August 5.

"Baitullah is alive but he is seriously sick," Mohammad said, adding: "God forbid if Baitullah is dead, Hakimullah will be his successor."

Hakimullah is considered as close aide of Mehsud, and a powerful commander who operates from the Orakzai tribal district, where US drones have conducted several missile strikes.

Pakistan in late April launched a punishing military offensive against Taliban in the northwest, targeting the rebels in the districts of Swat, Buner and Lower Dir after militants advanced perilously close to the capital.

Last month the military claimed to have cleared the area of the Taliban threat, and vowed to turn their attention to the mountainous tribal belt where Mehsud and his network have thrived since 2007.

Pakistani and US officials accuse Mehsud of masterminding the 2007 assassination of ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto and a string of other attacks that have killed hundreds of people here over the last two years.

Government officials have said the death of the Al-Qaeda-linked warlord plunged the TTP into disarray, with factions opening up as different commanders vied to lead the militia blamed for hundreds of deaths across Pakistan.

A suicide bomber blew himself up in a house Saturday, killing two soldiers and injuring three civilians in the mountain town of Kanju in Swat district, a military spokesman and the local police chief said.

"Security forces had arrested a suicide bomber, he ran away and when chased, entered into a house and blew himself up, killing two soldiers and wounding a woman and two men," the spokesman said.

In another incident a resident was killed when he stepped on a landmine in Swat's Kabal town, police chief Sajid Mohmand told AFP.

There were further casualties in the Khyber tribal district when militants attacked security forces, tribal administration official Rehan Gul Khattak told AFP.

"A woman was killed and six other civilians were injured by a shell fired by militants after it missed its target and landed on a house," Khattak said.

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