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Pakistan Starts Army Troops Deployment For Islamabad's Security

01.08.2014 16:37

Pakistan has started deployment of army troops for the security of Islamabad over concerns that the Taliban militants could carry out attacks in reaction to the ongoing major operation against in North Waziristan, officials said Friday. The army launched the long-awaited biggest offensive in the tribal.

Pakistan has started deployment of army troops for the security of Islamabad over concerns that the Taliban militants could carry out attacks in reaction to the ongoing major operation against in North Waziristan, officials said Friday.

The army launched the long-awaited biggest offensive in the tribal region against the local and foreign militants on June 15 after the fragile peace dialogue faced a deadlock over the Taliban deadly attacks.

Military officials say the security forces have killed more than 500 militants and destroyed their command and control system in the volatile tribal region.
As the Taliban have, in the past, carried out revenge attacks, the government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif expects a reaction from the Taliban and has decided to call out the troops to guard sensitive areas in Islamabad from August 1.

Official sources said the troops have started taking positions in various parts of the capital city in aid of the police and civil administration.
They said nearly 2000 troops will be deployed in key locations, mostly in the "Red Zone" which houses the president, the prime minister houses, parliament, diplomatic enclave and some other important government's buildings.

A spokesman for the Interior Ministry said the army troops will temporary be deployed in aid of the police force.

The government has already deployed paramilitary troops in the capital city in support of the police force following a deadly attack on judges and lawyers in Islamabad earlier this year.

Major opposition parties have opposed the decision and fear that the army could be used to stop political gatherings. However Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Khan has rejected the notion.

Khan said that the troops will perform security duties in Islamabad for three months and that the Constitution allows troops deployment in aid of the civil administration.

The Interior Ministry said that the troops would perform duties at Islamabad's Benazir Bhutto International Airport and other sensitive places in the capital city.He said the army's contingents from the Rapid Response Force will also perform duties in aid of the police and civil administration.

The troops' deployment comes at a time when a major opposition party has announced an anti-government march on Islamabad on August 14.

The cricketer-turned politician, Imran Khan, said hundreds of thousands of supporters of his Tehrik-e-Insaf or justice movement will march in Islamabad. Some other opposition parties say they would also join the march.

The government braces for the march on the day when Pakistan will celebrate its Independence Day.
Imran Khan said he will gather around one million people in Islamabad and the marchers will stage a sit-in unless the government accepts his demand for investigation into what he claimed fraud in the last year's parliamentary elections. (Cihan/Xinhua)



 
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