TTP claims taking counter-terrorism center in Bannu hostage, government says operation to be completed soon

Police stand guard along a road they blocked after Taliban militants seized a police station in Bannu, Pakistan, on December 19, 2022. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 19 December 2022
Follow

TTP claims taking counter-terrorism center in Bannu hostage, government says operation to be completed soon

  • Government official says prisoners snatched weapons from interrogators, released other inmates
  • TTP says granting prisoners’ safe passage to North, South Waziristan ‘only way’ to save hostages

ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani Taliban on Sunday claimed to have taken a large number of hostages at a counter-terrorism center in northwestern Pakistan, while the government said a security operation against the militants— who have been surrounded— would be completed soon. 

Prisoners at a counter-terrorism center in northwestern Pakistan’s Bannu city on Saturday snatched weapons from their interrogators and helped release other inmates, the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government confirmed. 

Pakistan has been fighting an insurgency by the TTP, which associates itself with Afghanistan’s Taliban. The Taliban regime in Afghanistan had been trying to broker talks between the Pakistani government and the TTP, which broke down earlier this year. 

KP government spokesperson Barrister Dr. Muhammad Saif, in a message to the media, denied militants had infiltrated the compound in the Bannu Cantonment area on Saturday. 

“Under interrogation militants snatched weapons from the interrogators and released more prisoners who have all been surrounded. The operation will be completed soon,” he said in a message to the media. 

Meanwhile, the Pakistani Taliban or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) said prisoners at the Bannu counter-terrorism center— which included the banned outfit’s fighters as well— had taken several Pakistan Army officers and the staff at the compound hostage. 

“They [prisoners] have been trying hard since last night to provide safe passage to them [hostages] but the Pakistan Army is not letting go of its ego,” the TTP said in a statement released to the media. 

The Pakistani Taliban rejected media reports that prisoners were seeking safe passage to Afghanistan. The TTP said it had spoken to government representatives to demand the prisoners be shifted to the tribal areas of North or South Waziristan. The banned outfit said, however, that the government had not given a “positive response” in return. 

“The only way to save the army personnel and prison staff taken hostage is to accept the prisoners’ demands and let them go to North or South Waziristan,” the Pakistani Taliban warned. 

The TTP said that it had instructed its fighters not to surrender to the army in case their demands are not accepted. The militant group denied the weapons being used by the prisoners had arrived from Afghanistan, adding that the prisoners had snatched them from their interrogators. 

Meanwhile, former prime minister Imran Khan blamed the government for failing to deal with the recent incidents of militancy in the country. 

"Apart from running our economy to the ground, this Imported govt has failed to deal with the 50% increase in terrorism in Pak with incidents from Chaman to Swat to Lakki Marwat to Bannu," he wrote on Twitter. 

 


Pakistan PM convenes political leaders to discuss Iran crisis, regional tensions

Updated 31 min 5 sec ago
Follow

Pakistan PM convenes political leaders to discuss Iran crisis, regional tensions

  • Leaders of major parties attend meeting on regional security and Pakistan’s military campaign
  • Parliamentarians call for national unity and cohesion under current circumstances, says PMO 

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif briefed leaders of various parliamentary parties on Wednesday about the ongoing crisis in Iran and Pakistan’s ongoing military conflict with Afghanistan, his office said in a statement. 

The meeting comes as Pakistan has intensified military operations against the Afghan Taliban and militant groups targeting its civilians and security forces along its western frontier, while the wider region faces growing instability after recent US-Israeli strikes on Iran and subsequent attacks across the Gulf.

Sharif decided to convene the session to update the leaders of various political parties in parliament on the security situation and Pakistan’s diplomatic outreach as tensions spread across the region.

“Participants emphasized the need for national unity, consensus and cohesion in the current circumstances,” the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) said in a statement. 

The statement said parliamentarians appreciated Pakistan’s diplomatic efforts for peace in the region and stressed the need to accelerate them further.

They presented suggestions to the government on what its future course of action should be.

“All participants reaffirmed their strong resolve to eliminate terrorism from the country,” the statement said. 

Representatives of major political parties, including the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, Pakistan Peoples Party, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, Muttahida Qaumi Movement and other parliamentary groups attended the briefing.

Pakistan has accused Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities of allowing militant groups such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) to operate from Afghan territory, allegations Kabul denies. Islamabad says it has targeted militant hideouts across the border after repeatedly raising the issue with Afghan officials.

The briefing also comes as the government closely monitors developments in the Middle East, where regional tensions have heightened concerns about energy supplies and broader security implications for the country.