Army, police search operation ongoing in Pakistan’s Swat Valley amid fears of Taliban comeback

Pakistani army soldiers and police stand guard on a foot patrol in a secured area of Mingora, Pakistan, on July 6, 2011. (AFP/File)
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Updated 21 September 2022
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Army, police search operation ongoing in Pakistan’s Swat Valley amid fears of Taliban comeback

  • Police and government officials and local elders confirm presence of up to 300 Pakistani Taliban militants in Swat
  • Insurgents from TTP took partial control of Swat Valley in 2007 before being ousted two years later in military operation

MINGORA: Army and police have launched a joint search operation in Pakistan’s northwestern Swat district against Pakistani Taliban militants, officials with direct knowledge of the activity said, amid widespread reports the group is attempting to regain a foothold in the mountainous area they once ruled with an iron fist.

Insurgents from the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) took partial control of Swat Valley in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province in 2007, before being ousted two years later in a major military operation hailed as a telling blow against militant violence. During this time, militants unleashed a reign of terror, killing and beheading politicians, singers, soldiers and opponents. They banned female education and destroyed nearly 200 girls’ schools.

Last month the Pakistani military denied reports TTP fighters had returned to Swat, calling the news “grossly exaggerated and misleading.” But local elders as well as police and government officials interviewed by Arab News this week reported the return of up to 300 Taliban militants to the Valley, and said localized joint operations by police and the army had been launched to quell the movement.

Locals fears of a Taliban comeback were most visible last week when hundreds of people took to the streets in Swat Valley to demand peace and protection. The protest came just days after a bombing claimed by the TTP killed eight people, including an influential anti-Taliban leader Idrees Khan, in what was the first major bombing in the area in over a decade. 

Taliban militants last week also kidnapped 10 employees of a telecom company and demanded Rs100 million ($418,000) against their release, according to a police report filed with the local counterterrorism department.

Three police officers in Swat, including one with direct knowledge of the operation, confirmed that a search operation led by police and military officials to identify and clear militant hideouts was ongoing.

A fourth security official said the “situation was fully being monitored,” without confirming an anti-TTP operation or whether the army was involved. 

All officials declined to be named as they were not authorized to publicly speak about the activity.

Pakistan’s interior minister Rana Sanaullah and a spokesperson for his ministry, Ali Nawaz, did not respond to requests for comment. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media wing, declined comment for this story. Representatives of the TTP could not be reached for comment on their tactics in Swat Valley.

“Law enforcement officials are alert and maintaining necessary vigil and alertness in the area and law and order is being maintained by the concerned LEAs,” one security official said, declining to be named.

A senior police official said at least 300 Taliban militants had been identified as being present on the Shaur, Peuchar, Kanala and Balasoor mountain tops of Swat’s Matta tehsil in recent months.

“A search operation has started, posts have been set up and Special Services Group’s (SSG) commandos have arrived,” the official, who had direct knowledge of the operation, told Arab News.

Barrister Muhammad Ali Saif, a spokesperson of the KP provincial government, confirmed the “scattered” presence of Taliban militants in Swat and the launch of a police operation but did not confirm if the military was involved.

“There is no specific area with their [TTP] permanent presence. They roam quietly and they have some [local] supporters there already,” he said.

“But wherever there is information of their presence, action is being taken. When they appear, they are either arrested or are killed … the province takes actions against them whenever there is report about their presence or there is such information that they or anyone else is involved in any illegal or terrorist activity.”

Saif also said he could not confirm if a full-scale military offensive such as in the past was being planned, adding that the decision would be taken by the federal government and the army.

Zahid Khan, an anti-Taliban leader of the Swat Qaumi Jirga, told Arab News the group had complained to police four months ago about growing Taliban’s presence, but their concerns were rebuffed. 

“They refuted when we inquired from police and local administration about the return of the Taliban,” Khan told Arab News.

But the police officer involved in the search operation said militants were being identified and action would be taken: “We have the capacity to eliminate them.”

The fears of a Taliban comeback have surfaced while the group has been holding peace talks with the government. But isolated militant attacks and security raids on militant hideouts have continued, raising fears these talks could break in the coming months, if not weeks.

A formal cease-fire between Pakistan and the TTP is still in place.


Pakistan vaccinates over 42 million children as last polio drive of 2025 enters fifth day

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Pakistan vaccinates over 42 million children as last polio drive of 2025 enters fifth day

  • Campaign running simultaneously in Pakistan and Afghanistan, last two polio-endemic countries
  • More than 400,000 vaccinators deployed nationwide to reach children under five, polio program says

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has vaccinated more than 42.2 million children in the first four days of its final nationwide polio campaign of 2025, health authorities said on Friday, as the drive entered its fifth day amid renewed efforts to curb a virus that remains endemic in only two countries worldwide.

The nationwide campaign, running from Dec. 15 to 21, targets children under the age of five and is being conducted simultaneously in Pakistan and Afghanistan, according to the National Emergency Operations Center (EOC), which oversees polio eradication efforts.

Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan are the only two countries where wild poliovirus transmission has never been interrupted, keeping global eradication efforts at risk. The virus, which can cause irreversible paralysis, has no cure and can only be prevented through repeated oral vaccination.

“The final national anti-polio campaign of 2025 is continuing successfully on its fifth day,” the National EOC said, adding that more than 42.2 million children have been vaccinated during the first four days of the drive.

Provincial data released by the National EOC showed that around 22.3 million children had been vaccinated in Punjab province, more than 9.417 million in Sindh, approximately 6.692 million in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and about 2.384 million in Balochistan. In Islamabad, over 450,000 children received polio drops, while more than 274,000 were vaccinated in Gilgit-Baltistan and over 714,000 in Azad Jammu and Kashmir.

“The polio campaign is being conducted simultaneously in Pakistan and Afghanistan,” the National EOC said, noting that more than 400,000 polio workers are going door to door across the country to administer vaccines.

The campaign comes as Pakistan reported 30 polio cases so far in 2025, underscoring the fragility of progress against the virus. Pakistan recorded 74 cases in 2024, a sharp rise from six cases in 2023, reflecting setbacks caused by vaccine hesitancy, misinformation and access challenges in high-risk areas.

Health officials say insecurity remains a major obstacle. Polio workers and their security escorts have repeatedly been targeted in militant attacks, particularly in parts of northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and southwestern Balochistan, complicating efforts to reach every child. Natural disasters, including flooding, have further disrupted vaccination campaigns in recent years.

“Parents and communities are urged to fully cooperate with polio workers,” the National EOC said, stressing that every child under the age of five must be given polio drops during the national campaign.

Pakistan has dramatically reduced polio prevalence since the 1990s, when annual cases exceeded 20,000. Health authorities warn, however, that without sustained access to children in underserved and conflict-affected areas, eradication will remain out of reach.