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Taliban releases Pak official in exchange for militants
Rezaul H Laskar in Islamabad
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February 23, 2009 09:23 IST
Last Updated: February 23, 2009 13:45 IST

Taliban [Images] militants, who had kidnapped a top civil official in the restive Swat valley in North West Frontier Province on Sunday, released him only in exchange for two militants, raising question marks over a peace deal stuck between the militant group and the government.

 

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan said the official, Kushal Khan, and his guards had been released in exchange for two militants who were arrested in Peshawar last week.

 

Kushal Khan and his six guards were abducted on Saturday on the outskirts of Mingora, the main city in Swat. "The government has released our two men and they will soon release another," he told reporters in Swat.

 

"The government violated the agreement by arresting our men in Peshawar and killing one in Dir. Therefore, we had to do this," Khan said, referring to the official's abduction.

 

However, the Swat peace pact covers only the Malakand division in the NWFP, official reports had said. It is not clear how the arrest of a Taliban cadre in the provincial capital of Peshawar was construed by the group as a violation of the deal.

 

Earlier, the Taliban had denied reports about the official's abduction, saying he was their 'guest' and had been picked up for 'discussing important matters'. Despite a ceasefire called by the Taliban and local authorities, militants wearing masks are patrolling roads in Swat and manning check posts.

 

The kidnapping of the official comes just days after the NWFP government reached an agreement with religious hardliners to enforce Islamic laws in Swat in a bid to counter the Taliban insurgency.

 

Following the agreement, leaders of the banned Tehrik- e-Nifaz-e-Shariah Mohammadi began peace parleys with the Taliban. The Taliban called a ten-day ceasefire on February 15 to facilitate the talks. The government has announced a separate truce.

 

However, a journalist was killed by unidentified gunmen shortly after the Taliban ceasefire was announced last week, raising questions about the future of the peace process.

 

Swat has been a hotbed of militancy over the past two years, with fierce fighting between the Taliban and security forces claiming the lives of hundreds of people, a majority of them civilians.

 

Hundreds of thousands of people have also fled the area due to the fighting. Key issues such as disarming the Taliban and dismantling their parallel administration in parts of Swat are yet to be addressed by the authorities.   


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