Pakistani security forces backed by helicopter gunships have killed 15 Taliban militants and captured 60 others in an operation that began earlier this week in a troubled northwestern town, the military said today.
The operation began on Wednesday around Hangu town after militants killed 17 soldiers and abducted 49 paramilitary soldiers and government officials just over a week ago.
"The operation is still on. We have successfully cleared the valley and now our troops are fighting militants on the mountains," spokesman Major-General Athar Abbas said, adding five soldiers had also been wounded in the fighting.
He said the operation's goal was to flush out militants from Hangu district, west of the garrison town of Kohat, but not to extend it into the neighbouring Orakzai tribal region, where most insurgents were believed to have fled.
Residents said the military was using heavy artillery and mortars to hit militants' position in the Tora Warai area, west of Hangu town.
A general deterioration in the security situation across the northwest in recent weeks has coincided with calls by Western allies with troops in neighbouring Afghanistan for Pakistan to put the militants under greater military pressure.
Violence subsided in Pakistan's northwest after a new coalition formed following February elections began talks.
But Pakistani Taliban leader Baitullah Mehsud suspended talks last month and the security situation has deteriorated once more.
Authorities blamed Mehsud for a wave of suicide attacks across the country over the past one year, including one that killed former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, whose party heads the new coalition. Mehsud has denied involvement.