Pak 'kills' 751 militants, but shows no evidence
Pak 'kills' 751 militants, but shows no evidence
Security operation in Swat and 2 other districts in final phase.

Islamabad: At least 751 militants have been killed in the security forces' operation in Pakistan's troubled northwest, the military said on Tuesday after heliborne troops landed in the heartland of the Swat Taliban for what seemed to be the final push against the militants.

Chief military spokesperson Major General Athar Abbas told reporters that 751 militants had so far been killed in ‘Operation Raah-e-Haq’ that began April 26, while 29 security personnel had lost their lives and 77 were injured.

According to Abbas, the security forces had accomplished "significant achievements" in their operations in Swat and two other districts of the North West Frontier Province.

Images and videos of the dead militants will be released on Wednesday, said Abbas, who heads the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

The statement acquires significance in the light of questions being raised by Pakistani citizens on the manner in which the operations were being conducted.

"There is guarded support from the common man, but questions are beginning to be asked - where are all these dead Taliban for one?" said The News said in an editorial on Tuesday.

"Why is artillery being used to attack the Taliban rather than infantry who can then hold the position they have just taken? What is the physical state of the centre of towns like Mingora and why can't we have a couple of 'embedded' correspondents who can write a pooled dispatch for the English and Urdu press every day?" the editorial wondered.

"We know surprisingly little--in fact beyond official daily briefings almost nothing--about the war with the Taliban," it said.

TV channels show stock footage of Cobra helicopters and armour being moved on flatbed trucks "and the very-capable army spokesperson gives a daily update in measured tones that tell us next to nothing of substance - and is not backed up by any battlefield reports or even still-pictures of our army in action", the editorial pointed out.

Earlier Tuesday, another army officer was quoted as saying: "Heliborne troops have landed in Peochar."

Peochar is the headquarters of Swat Taliban commander Maulana Fazlullah, the son-in-law of radical cleric Sufi Mohammad who had brokered a widely panned-peace deal with the North West Frontier Province (NWFP) government.

Under the deal, Sharia laws were to be imposed in Swat and six other districts of the NWFP, which are collectively known as the Malakand division, in return for the Taliban laying down their arms.

The accord came into force in mid-April but the Taliban reneged on it and instead moved south from Swat to occupy Buner district that is just 100 km from Islamabad.

The Pakistani Army went into action initially in Lower Dir to the west of Swat and which is Sufi Mohammad's home district and then in Buner and Swat.

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