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    Al Qaeda spy chief killed in Pakistani raid
    (Agencies)
    Updated: 2004-03-29 23:33

    Pakistani troops killed a spy chief in Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda network in a 12-day sweep on the desolate Afghan frontier, an army official said Monday, vowing to step up the hunt for Islamic militants.

    The army said it would flush foreign fighters from Pakistan's mountainous tribal territories bordering eastern Afghanistan after a bloody offensive in South Waziristan district ended Sunday with more than 100 people killed.

    "The casualties were relatively high but a small cost for the lofty cause of elimination of terrorism from Pakistan society," military spokesman Major-General Shaukat Sultan told reporters.

    He said troops had killed 63 militants, including an al Qaeda intelligence chief whom he identified only as "Mr. Abdullah." He would not provide further details such as the man's nationality, full name or how and when he was killed.

    "He was killed in this operation," he told reporters.

    U.S. forces are hunting on the other side of the border in a pincer operation. Militants linked to al Qaeda are widely believed to be behind bomb blasts in Madrid this month that killed 190.

    Sultan said a wounded senior Uzbek al Qaeda leader, Tahir Yuldashev, was on the run. Yuldashev was the 10th most senior member of al Qaeda and was now hiding somewhere along the Afghan border, he added.

    The military claimed victory after securing the release on Sunday of 12 paramilitary troops taken hostage when the fighting began, but about 50 soldiers were killed and an unknown number of fighters escaped, possibly through a labyrinth of tunnels.

    Troops captured 163 militants, including 73 foreigners, Sultan said. It was Pakistan's biggest raid on its semi-autonomous South Waziristan tribal territory.

    More than a dozen civilians are also believed dead.

    About 50,000 army troops have been deployed in Pakistan's rugged Afghan frontier to clear foreign militants.

    "There are no other tribal communities that we know of sheltering and harboring militants. But if there are, we will find out," said Sultan.

    But in the latest of a series of small attacks elsewhere on the border, two rockets were fired at a paramilitary camp in North Waziristan late Sunday, causing some damage but no injuries, residents in the area said.

    HUNT FOR YULDASHEV

    Capturing Yuldashev would be a prize for President Pervez Musharraf, accused by conservative Islamic politicians of pandering to President Bush at the expense of Pakistani Muslims in the South Waziristan offensive.

    Musharraf says al Qaeda militants with links to the tribal area were behind two attempts on his life in December.

    Yuldashev, leader of the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, was accused of a series of bomb deadly blasts in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent, in 1999 and is rumored to have led resistance to U.S. forces during fighting in Afghanistan in the spring of 2002.

    As convoys of troops withdrew from the area around the militant hideout to a nearby base near South Waziristan's capital of Wana, families returned on wagons and tractor-trolleys to the site of the fighting, many finding their homes destroyed.

    "My family has nothing to do with any group or militants, but my house is totally destroyed. We are poor people. They have ruined us," said one, from Serwakai, near Wana. Some schools were hit and a number of water wells damaged, they added.

    Military bulldozers had flattened nearly all the mud-walled fortress-like homes where Pashtun tribesmen had given refuge to al Qaeda and foreign fighters believed to include Uzbeks, Arabs and Chechens, the residents said. Tribal elders in the Afghan border district of Zhob, about 40 miles south of Wana, met with a Pakistani general and agreed to fight if al Qaeda-linked militants move into their area, Pakistan's state APP news agency reported.

    The fighting began when paramilitary forces hunting al Qaeda and other militants ran into a hail of bullets on March 16, suggesting tribesmen were helping to protect a "high-value target," perhaps bin Laden's deputy Ayman al-Zawahri.

    Pakistan, while supporting the U.S. war on terror, had come under pressure for not doing enough to flush out militants blamed for a campaign of violence in Afghanistan.

     
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