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Pashtuns protest Pakistani meddling in Afghanistan
07 Nov 2006 14:23:28 GMT
Source: Reuters

By Saeed Ali Achakzai

CHAMAN, Pakistan, Nov 7 (Reuters) - Several thousand ethnic Pashtuns rallied in a Pakistani town near the Afghan border on Tuesday, accusing Pakistan of meddling in Afghanistan's affairs.

The protesters, Pakistani Pashtuns and some Afghan Pashtun refugees, accused Pakistan of providing sanctuary to Taliban militants, who have this year unleashed the most intense violence in Afghanistan since their 2001 ousting from power.

"We demand the government of Pakistan stops playing its game in Afghanistan," Hamid Khan Achakzai, a leader of a Pakistani Pashtun nationalist party and a former member of parliament, told the rally in the southwestern town of Chaman.

"This duplicitous policy poses serious danger to the entire world," Achakzai said.

Pashtuns live on both sides of the rugged Afghan-Pakistani border.

Afghan complaints that Taliban insurgents are operating from safe havens on the Pakistani side have seriously strained relations between the neighbours this year.

Pakistan nurtured the Taliban after they emerged from Pashtun tribal lands along the border in the early 1990s, but officially ended support after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States.

PAKISTAN DENIALS

A major ally in the U.S.-led war on terror, Pakistan denies helping the Taliban but says some militants are able to cross the porous frontier.

Protesters at the rally in Chaman shouted "Down with terrorism in Afghanistan" and "Down with the policy of interference in Afghanistan".

Afghan President Hamid Karzai last month asked two ethnic Pashtun Pakistani politicians, including the head of an Islamist group, for help to stem the Taliban insurgency.

Pakistan accuses its old rival India, which has close relations with Karzai, of stirring ethnic unrest in Pakistani areas on the Afghan border.

The border areas have traditionally been strongholds of conservative Islamist groups but Pashtun nationalist parties, which want the merger of Pashtun areas on both sides of the frontier, also have support.

Pakistani forces have been battling Islamist militants in Pashtun tribal areas on its side of the border over the last few years and hundreds of people have been killed.

In the latest violence, militants fired at least six rockets at a paramilitary base in the town of Wana, in the South Waziristan region, to the north of Chaman, but there were no reports of casualties, a security official said.

Two rockets landed near the base when the governor of North West Frontier Province, Ali Mohammad Jan Orakzai, was meeting tribal elders there.
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Pakistan Junior Foreign Minister Makhdoom Khusro Bakhtiar (L) escorts British Prime Minister Tony Blair upon his arrival at a military base in Rawalpindi November 18, 2006. Blair arrived in Pakistan on Saturday for talks with President Pervez Musharraf on how to defeat a resurgent Taliban, pool counter-terrorist intelligence and tackle militancy in Pakistan's religious schools.