Indefinite curfew clamped in Wana

Published February 17, 2021
The residents said armed men of ‘peace committees’ had closed their offices in Wana. — AFP/File
The residents said armed men of ‘peace committees’ had closed their offices in Wana. — AFP/File

SOUTH WAZIRISTAN: The local administration on Tuesday imposed a curfew in Wana, the headquarters of South Waziristan tribal district, and surrounding areas for an indefinite period amid a search operation for the perpetrators of an attack on security forces.

A public notice issued by the office of the assistant commissioner said Wana Bazaar would remain closed until the normalisation of situation in the wake of the Sunday night terrorist attack.

The residents said armed men of ‘peace committees’ had closed their offices in Wana.

“General public is requested to keep aloof from Wana Bazaar in order to ensure the safety of people and their properties,” said the notice, which was circulated late Monday night.

The administration urged the residents to cooperate with the district administration and security forces.

Two soldiers of Frontier Corps were martyred and five others were injured in the improvised explosive device blast on Wana Bypass Road on Sunday night. A vehicle of paramilitary forces was bound for the Scouts Camp from the town when the IED went off. No terrorist group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Residents said all entry and exit points to the town had been blocked with razor wire after the imposition of curfew. They said the security forces and police had begun an extensive search operation in the bazaar.

The residents of Azam Warsak near Wana demonstrated against the search of houses and curfew.

An official told Dawn that the search operation for terrorists had been extended to surrounding villages of Wana and weapons had been seized.

He said the law-enforcement agencies were carrying a house-to-house operation in villages. The official said the security forces also raided a settlement of Afghan nationals in the northern parts of Wana town and recovered weapons and ammunition.

Sources said hundreds of Afghan families had been living in the area without legal cover.

They said the Bypass Road, where the vehicle hit with IED, had a large population of undocumented Afghans.

The government had closed registered and unregistered refugee camps in the erstwhile Fata in the first decade of 2000 and refugees were shifted to the settled areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Published in Dawn, February 17th, 2021

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