A roadside bomb killed as many as 14 Pakistani soldiers in the northern border region of North Waziristan yesterday, military officials said, a day after the Pakistani Taliban leader called for attacks on the military in the area to stop.
The explosion occurred on a road about 50 kilometres south of the provincial capital of Miranshah. Twenty-one soldiers were wounded in the attack, senior army officials said.
A spokesman for the Mujah-ideen Ansar, a group dominated by Uzbek fighters, claimed responsibility and said the attack was retaliation for the Pakistani army’s complicity in drone strikes. The group is allied to Taliban fighters.
Pakistan frequently protests publicly about US drone strikes but has not taken any legal steps to end them.
On Saturday, Hakimullah Mehsud, the leader of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), had circulated a leaflet calling for an end to the Taliban’s infrequent attacks on Pakistani soldiers in North Waziristan.
Thousands of Pakistani soldiers are stationed there.
The ceasefire did not apply to the rest of the country, where there are often fierce clashes between the Taliban and security services.
The mountainous tribal region of North Waziristan along the Afghan border is a stronghold of the Taliban and al-Qaeda. South Waziristan is under the control of the Wazir tribe, who have a peace deal with the Pakistani military. It was unclear if the leaflet was related to rumours of splits in the movement. It called on local and foreign fighters to unite because “the enemy is trying to divide and rule us”.
The Taliban have formed alliances with a number of other militant groups in North Waziristan who are violently opposed to the Pakistani state. Taliban commanders are divided over whether the Pakistani state or Nato forces are their top target. Such divisions were laid bare in November by an attempted suicide attack on Mullah Nazir, a top militant commander from the Wazir tribe in South Waziristan. He signed a peace deal with the Pakistani army but supported attacks on Nato forces in Afghanistan.