Pakistan gunship helicopters pounded militant targets in North Waziristan Friday, killing up to 20 takfiri rebels of outlawed Taliban, as the number of civilians fleeing an expected ground offensive passed 150,000.

21 June 2014 - 07:52
250 Taliban terrorists sent to hell in Pakistan army’s Operation Zarb-e-Azb

Pakistan gunship helicopters pounded militant targets in North Waziristan Friday, killing up to 20 takfiri rebels of outlawed Taliban, as the number of civilians fleeing an expected ground offensive passed 150,000.

Nearly 100,000 people have left North Waziristan tribal area, on the Afghan border; this week after the military launched a long-awaited assault against militant hideouts.

The authorities eased a shoot-on-sight curfew on June 18 to give civilians a chance to leave before troops begin a full-blooded ground operation.

A senior security official said that helicopter gunships targeted militant hideouts in an early morning raid in Kutabkhel area of Miranshah, the main town of North Waziristan, killing up to 20 Yazidi takfiri nasbi militants.

A local intelligence official also confirmed the attack and casualties. Nearly 250 takfiri insurgents have been killed since the start of the operation on June 15, according to security officials, though it is not possible to confirm the number or identity of those killed.

The military offensive began after a bloody and dramatic attack on Karachi airport last week brought an end to months of largely fruitless government efforts to negotiate a peace deal with the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP).

Washington has long demanded action against militant hideouts in North Waziristan, which has served as a rear base for insurgents battling US-led forces in Afghanistan, but Pakistan resisted.

The fighting has triggered a huge exodus of civilians from North Waziristan, both into Bannu, Peshawar and Kohat and across the border into Afghanistan. “Some 157,000 people reached Bannu from different areas of North Waziristan,” Arshad Khan, director general of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) Disaster Management Authority, said on Friday.

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