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Pakistan's presidential favorite under guard

Friday, August 29, 2008 11:17:12 PM
By ASIF SHAHZAD

Supporters of a Pakistani Islamic group Jamiat Ullama-e-Islam hold a rally against military operation in tribal areas and demanding to improve country's  law and order sitiation, Friday, Aug. 29, 2008 in Chaman, Pakistan. Violence has surged in Pakistan's border region, just as the country's leaders jockey for power in the wake of Pervez Musharraf's resignation as president. (AP Photo/Shah Khalid)ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Pakistan's presidential front-runner has moved into a tightly guarded government compound over security fears, officials said as a militant campaign against the government led to more violence in the country's volatile northwest.

The army said Saturday at least 30 Taliban were killed in fresh air strikes.

The party of Asif Ali Zardari, the widower of slain ex-Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, has sought to assure the U.S. since Pervez Musharraf's ouster as president that it is committed to battling terrorists.

The country has been hit by a string of suicide bombings this month, including one last week that left 67 dead, many of them civilians.

Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani told reporters Friday that Zardari — who is widely expected to win a Sept. 6 presidential election by lawmakers — was staying at a hilltop mansion in Islamabad's government quarters "for security reasons."

He did not elaborate, but an intelligence official said there had been reports that the presidential hopeful could be the target of an attack and that he had switched locations after Musharraf's Aug. 18 resignation.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.

Pakistan's 5-month-old civilian government initially sought to calm militant violence by holding peace talks, something Musharraf briefly tried as well.

But it has increasingly intensified military action against al-Qaida- and Taliban-linked militants in the northwest, especially in the tribal regions along the Afghan border — a rumored hide-out of Osama bin Laden.

Army spokesman Major Nasir Ali said Saturday at least 30 Taliban were killed when the military backed by fighter jets destroyed some of militant hide-outs in Swat Valley, a once-popular tourist destination, on Friday.

Taliban spokesman Muslim Khan earlier said eight militants, including a local commander, had died.

Militants have threatened more suicide bombings unless the operations cease. They have hit one of the country's largest military installations, a hospital and a police station in the last week.

Paramilitary troops foiled a suicide attack in the northwestern region of Kohat on Friday. Four civilians were killed and 28 people, most of them security forces, were wounded when troops fired on an explosive-laden car that had sped through a checkpoint, said Rasheed Khan, a government official.

Suspected militants also blew up two bridges in the area, said Kohat district administrator Mohammad Siraj Khan.


Associated Press Writer Riaz Khan contributed to this report.


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