DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan - About 100 suspected pro-Taliban militants
attacked the house of a government official in northwestern Pakistan before dawn
Thursday, killing 13 people, police said.
Pakistani journalists chant slogans during a protest against
the intimidation of journalists in Islamabad May 30, 2007. [Reuters]
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The house belonged to Ameerud Din,
the top administrator of the Khyber Tribal region in North West Frontier
Province, bordering Afghanistan.
Din was not home at the time, but his brother, who also is a government
servant, was among those killed. Authorities said the dead included six members
of the same family and seven guests.
"The attackers fired rockets, threw hand grenades and used guns" for about 30
minutes before fleeing, said Sanaullah Khan, an area police chief.
Two others were injured in the attack near the village of Guman, 12 miles
from the troubled town of Tank.
Tank lies in a swath of territory near the Afghan border where Islamic
militants have challenged the government's authority with increasing success
over the past year. It is also not far from the South Waziristan tribal region
where remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaida are believed to be hiding, and where
the military has carried out scores of operations against foreign and local
militants.
Analysts say pro-Taliban groups are extending their
influence from the semiautonomous tribal region next to the Afghan border. The
area is considered a haven for Taliban guerrillas fighting foreign troops in
Afghanistan as well as a possible hiding place for al-Qaida leader Osama bin
Laden.