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THE STANS
Taliban targets pro-NATO Pakistani MPs
by Staff Writers
Islamabad, Pakistan (UPI) Mar 27, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Pakistani lawmakers who favor reopening a NATO supply route through the country will be targeted for death, the Taliban warned.

Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan issued a statement Sunday warning lawmakers that they would be attacked if they favored a proposal to reopen the NATO supply route into Afghanistan, which was closed late last year.

"If the Parliament opens land routes for the NATO troops, we will target members of Parliament and their party leaders," Ehsan said. "We are aware that the pro-American parliamentarians have started efforts to legalize routes to NATO forces."

The Taliban would "publicly slaughter drivers who carry supplies for NATO forces," Ehsan said. "The Pakistan army and the rulers are bent on destroying the country and the Taliban are working for a new Pakistan."

The warning came after a weekend of protests staged by religious parties around the country as lawmakers prepared to open debate on Pakistan's relationship with the West -- including a Parliamentary Committee on National Security recommendation that the NATO supply lines be restored with the imposition of new a tax on container trucks and oil tankers.

Pakistan closed the supply routes in November after a NATO airstrike on two Pakistani-Afghanistan border posts using drone aircraft killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

Maulana Faza-ur-Rahman, a leader of Jamiat ulema-e-Islam party, told a public rally Sunday in the northwestern city of Peshawar that the nation will stand against the NATO supplies, the Chinese news agency Xinhua reported.

Jamaat-i-Islami Party leader Qazi Hussain Ahmad told the English language newspaper Dawn Friday that party workers would attack NATO supply convoys if they resume.

"Workers of JI would stop NATO supplies by force if the route was restored," he told a public meeting at Nowshera Kalan while heaping scorn on the Awami National Party and Pakistan People's Party, members of the ruling coalition.

The two parties were trying to promote secularism in the country while ignoring the problems of the Pashtun people, Hussain told supporters.

Opponents also announced a protest rally would be staged Tuesday in front of Pakistan's Parliament.

Awami National Party leader and Pakistani Minister for Railways Haji Ghulam Ahmad Bilour Friday called for reopening NATO supply routes as being "in the larger national interest."

"Look the ANP wants NATO supplies to be restored in the best interest of the country, as we (the Pakistani nation) are not in a position to invite the wrath of the United States," he told Dawn. "We will strongly support parliamentary committee's resolution for restoring NATO supplies which is to be debated in the Parliament."

The opposition to reopening NATO supply routes is linked to anger over the continuing use of drones by the United States to target suspected terrorists in Pakistan's tribal areas.

The same Parliamentary Committee on National Security last week demanded Washington and NATO cease the attacks in a report delivered to a joint session of both houses of Parliament, the Voice of America reported.

Committee Chairman Mian Raza Rabbani said the "drone strikes are counterproductive, cause loss of valuable lives and property, radicalize the local population, create support for terrorists and fuel anti-American sentiments."

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French soldier wounded in January Afghan attack dies
Paris (AFP) March 27, 2012 - A French soldier wounded in a January mass shooting by an Afghan army colleague died Tuesday, bringing to 17 the number of NATO troops killed by Afghan forces this year, officials said.

Captain Christophe Schnetterle of the 93rd Mountain Artillery Regiment based in Varces died after being wounded in the January 20 attack by an Afghan colleague in Kapisa, eastern Afghanistan, the defence ministry said.

Four other French soldiers were killed in the attack. A total of 83 French soldiers have died in Afghanistan since they first deployed there in 2001.

France has begun to gradually withdraw its 3,600 troops, planning to have only around 400 to 500 military trainers at the end of 2014, when NATO is scheduled to end its combat mission.



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THE STANS
Killer Afghan officer was not Taliban: general
Kandahar, Afghanistan (AFP) March 27, 2012
The commander of an Afghan lieutenant who killed two British soldiers denied Tuesday that the officer was a Taliban infiltrator, saying he had served in the army with credit for years. Concern is growing about so-called green on blue attacks with 16 NATO troops killed by their Afghan colleagues since January - more than one in six of the 91 foreign soldiers to have died in Afghanistan so fa ... read more


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