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November 8, 2009
         
Pakistani al-Qaeda on the run: Qureshi
Updated on Thursday, July 02, 2009, 21:40 IST
London, July 02: Pakistan has claimed that it has turned the tide in its battle against Taliban and al-Qaeda with 95 per cent of the Swat and Malakand areas had been cleared of Islamist militias.

"I think we've turned the tide and democracy has played a significant role," Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi was quoted as saying by The Guardian.

Qureshi said 95 per cent of the Swat and Malakand areas, which were seized by extremists, had been cleared of Islamist militias since a government offensive began in May.

"As we've put on the pressure, the militants have realigned. We are taking them all on. We are not picking between a bad and a good terrorist. A terrorist is a terrorist," he said.

The army has eliminated a lot of the second and third tier leadership and that has hit their effectiveness, and their capacity to regroup and counter-attack is diminishing gradually, he added.

Claiming that public opinion had turned decisively against the extremists over the last few months, paving the way for the government's military successes, the Foreign Minister said "today, public opinion has converted to such an extent that the local tribes have set up lashkars (militias) to support army operations."

Qureshi said the army was pressing deep into the South Waziristan tribal territory, striking at the base of one of the most powerful Pakistani warlords, Baitullah Mehsud.

Islamabad accuses Mehsud of masterminding the assassination of former premier Benazir Bhutto in December 2007.

People in the Swat valley had realised what Taliban rule cost them in terms of lost livelihoods and missed education for their daughters, and the Pakistani media had lost its fear and illusions about the extremists, once portrayed as Robin Hood figures, he said.

The Foreign Minister said a video of a 17-year-old girl being flogged by the Taliban for being seen with a man who was not her husband had a pivotal effect on public opinion.

"It put people into shock. People asked- is this the Pakistan we want? And their answer was no," he added.

The report also quoted an opinion poll stating 80 per cent of Pakistanis believe that the Taliban and other Islamist extremists pose a "critical threat" to the country.

A previous poll in September 2007 found that only 34 per cent viewed the Taliban as a threat.

Bureau Report


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