Drone
blitz on Pakistan enters third straight day
Up
to 27 people have died in strikes that began on Saturday as US shows
no signs of bowing to Pakistani objections
4
June, 2012
Rockets
fired from a US drone killed between eight and 15 people in
north-west Pakistan on Monday, officials have said in varying
accounts. It is the third strike in as many days after attacks on
Saturday and Sunday killed a total of 12 people.
The
latest strike targeted a militant hideout in the Hesokhel village of
the North Waziristan tribal region, officials said.
US
drones hit targets in the South Waziristan tribal region on Saturday
and Sunday. There have been a total of seven strikes in less than two
weeks.
The
US and Pakistan are deadlocked in difficult negotiations for the
reopening of overland supply routes to Nato forces in Afghanistan. No
breakthrough is in sight.
Islamabad
blocked the routes in November 2011 after 24 Pakistani soldiers were
killed by cross-border "friendly fire" from Nato aircraft.
To reopen the roads Islamabad wants an apology and an end to drone
strikes but the US president, Barack Obama, is taking a hardline
stand.
The
latest attack followed closely on the heels of another drone strike
on Sunday that killed 10 suspected militants. Two Pakistani
intelligence officials said in that attack, four missiles were fired
at targets in the village of Mana Raghzai in South Waziristan near
the border with Afghanistan.
At
the time of the attack, suspected militants were gathered to offer
condolences to the brother of a militant commander killed during
another drone strike on Saturday. The brother was one of those who
died in the Sunday morning strike.
On
Sunday, gunmen killed four Shia minority Muslims, a police officer
and a bystander in a busy market of south-western Pakistani city of
Quetta, said police officer Abdul Wahid, who added that the killings
had a sectarian motive.
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