|
19 May 2009 Turkish province of Istanbul is
hosting a meeting on Afghanistan and Pakistan that is
being attended by representatives from 22 countries.
Officials from the European Union (EU) and United
Nations (UN) are also participating in the Istanbul
meeting, which happens to be the third meeting
attended by representatives from 22 countries on
Afghanistan and Pakistan.
U.S.'s Special Envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan
Richard Holbrooke is among the participants at the
Istanbul meeting.
The first meeting of the 22 countries took place in
Munich, Germany while the second one took place at
Tokyo, Japan.
The meetings on Afghanistan and Pakistan take place to
discuss problems in the region and provide assistance
to the region.
Pakistan Holds Swat Emergency Talks
Pakistan's prime minister has gathered political
parties for emergency talks on the situation in the
northwest, where security forces have entered two
Taliban-held towns.
Yusuf Raza Gilani said the army would stay in the Swat
valley until the more than one million displaced
residents can return safely.
"The operation against the terrorists is progressing
very successfully and those who destroyed the peace of
the nation are fleeing in disguise," Gilani said in
his opening address to the all-parties conference on
Monday.
Al Jazeera's Mike Hanna, reporting from Islamabad,
said representatives of more than 40 national and
religious parties were being briefed on the ongoing
offensive in the Swat valley.
"What is being discussed too is a national policy for
Pakistan in terms of its counter-terrorism strategy,"
he said.
"The basis of the discussion is how to form a national
action campaign based on Pakistani sovereignty. In
other words, the assistance of no outside force will
be used countering the threats to the country from
within."
'Crushing the Taliban'
Hanna said the government was not only focused on
"crushing the Pakistani Taliban completely".
"They also wish to isolate them politically and remove
all forms of popular support to drain the water in
which groups like this operate."
The army said on Sunday it was battling fighters on
the outskirts of Mingora, the main town in the area,
and had entered two other Taliban-held towns.
Muslim Khan, a Swat Taliban spokesman, told The
Associated Press news agency that the fighters were
prepared for any onslaught.
"We will fight until the last breath for the
enforcement of Islamic law," he said.
"We consider ourselves on the right path."
About 15,000 members of the security forces are
fighting between 4,000 and 5,000 Taliban fighters in
Swat, according to the military.
The government has said about 1,000 Taliban fighters
have been killed during the 23-day offensive.
The government on Sunday urged civilians to leave
areas where the fighting was ongoing.
The United Nations refugee agency has registered 1.17
million people displaced by the fighting in the Swat
area since May 2, and has called for a massive
international response to the humanitarian crisis.
The UN said only about 18 per cent of the displaced
were staying in the 12 camps set up by the
authorities, while the rest were staying with friends,
relatives, in rented accommodation or in "spontaneous
settlements" that were springing up.
EsinIslam.Com
|