The military has captured a high-ranking Taliban commander who once tried to blow up former president Pervez Musharraf and later escaped jail with hundreds of other prisoners, security officials said on Tuesday. Adnan Rashid was captured on Friday in a house where he was living with his family in north-west mountainous region bordering Afghanistan, the officials said.
He was injured in a shootout during his arrest. Rashid, captured in the Wana area of South Waziristan, is the first major Taliban commander captured since the military launched an offensive in neighbouring North Waziristan last month. The army says it will drive Taliban insurgents from their key strongholds in the region. The offensive followed years of pressure on Pakistan by its Nato allies to crack down on Taliban havens in North Waziristan. But local residents said that most militants moved out well before ground troops arrived. More than half a million civilians were also ordered to leave last month before the offensive began. Government figures show more than 900,000 have sought aid, although that also indicates fraud and duplications.
Since then, the government has seized control of Miranshah, the capital of North Waziristan. It claims to have killed hundreds of militants. Rashid, believed to be in his mid-30s, is a former Pakistani air force officer who tried to become a suicide bomber before he was jailed for a 2003 attempt to blow up then-President Musharraf. He escaped from jail in 2012 along with nearly 400 other militants after militants attacked Bannu prison using rocket propelled grenades and assault rifles. Following his release, he claimed responsibility for masterminding another jail break that freed 250 prisoners, made a series of YouTube videos and wrote an open letter attempting to justify the assassination attempt on schoolgirl activist Malala Yousafzai.
Local residents in the area where Rashid was captured say that leaflets purporting to be from the Taliban were being circulated, blaming Rashid's capture on some local Taliban commanders and promising vengeance.
AFP adds: Five soldiers were killed Tuesday in gunfights with militants during an army offensive against insurgent hideouts in a north-western tribal area, the military said. The two clashes happened near the town of Mirali in North Waziristan, where the army is in the midst of a major operation to clear the area of militants and their strongholds.
The military said two soldiers were killed "in an intense exchange of fire with terrorists in and around Mirali", while three others were killed in a gunfight with militants in the nearby Fateh Khel area. Eleven militants were killed in the clashes, the military added. The area is off-limits to journalists, so the number and identity of those killed cannot be independently verified. A security official told AFP that the army had begun ground operations in the Mirali and nearby Dattakhel areas on Monday.
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