Pak Army completes counter-terrorism training of 500 LEA personnel
So far, total 2300 LEA's troops all over Pakistan has been trained at NCTC, Pabbi.
RAWALPINDI (Web Desk / AFP) - A batch of 500 personal from Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs) of Pakistan Air Force, Pakistan Navy, Frontier Corps (KPK), Anti-Narcotics Force, Strategic Plans Division, Army Strategic Forces Command, Defence Services Guard, Pakistan Rangers (Sindh / Punjab) and Azad Jammu & Kashmir Police has successfully completed their counter terrorism training under auspices of Pakistan Army, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) reported on Friday.
Lieutenant General Umar Farooq Durrani, Corps Commander Mangla witnessed the closing ceremony and awarded medals to the students who excelled during the course.
While addressing the audience, the chief guest appreciated the standard of training demonstrated by the participants of NICTC – 5.
He congratulated the training staff of NCTC Pabbi for exceptionally high standard of dedication.
According to ISPR, it is the 5th batch of National Integrated Counter Terrorism Course. So far, total 2300 LEA‘s troops all over Pakistan has been trained at NCTC, Pabbi.
Last month, the military released a statement saying that Army Chief General Raheel Sharif had given the order to launch the final phase of Operation Zarb-e-Azb in North Waziristan, one of the tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan in which militants had previously operated with impunity.
A tweet from a military spokesman said the operation "has begun", though the army offered no further details.
However a senior security official told AFP that the push in the southern pockets of Shawal and Data Khel began "a couple of days ago", with warm weather melting the snow covering the mountainous terrain.
"Both ground and air assets are being used to take on the terrorists hiding in the areas," the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.
"The objective is to cleanse the area of militants," he said, adding he could give no further details for security reasons.
The army launched the operation under US pressure in mid-2014, in a bid to wipe out militant bases in the North Waziristan tribal area and bring an end to the near decade-long insurgency that has cost Pakistan thousands of lives.
The operation was intensified after the Taliban massacred more than 150 people, the majority of them children, at a school in the northwestern city of Peshawar in December 2014.
The US has praised the operation as a success and security has improved noticeably in Pakistan since it was launched, with militancy-related violence in 2015 dropping to its lowest level since 2007, the year the Tehreek-e-Taliban was formed.
A second senior security official told AFP that the military also plans to step up intelligence-based anti-militant operations in Pakistan‘s cities.
Such operations are already underway in major cities like Karachi, but he said they will "now be intensified to clear our cities of militants forever".
The Pakistani military says it has killed more than 3,600 insurgents in the tribal zone, with 358 soldiers having lost their lives. Observers caution that many other militants have crossed over the border into Afghanistan.
Media are barred from the region and there is no way to verify the toll.
Pakistan security analyst Hasan Askari warned that even if the final phase is successful, there will be a long road ahead.
"There is a lot of rehabilitation work that needs to be carried out and civilians don’t have the capacity to do it alone," he told AFP, predicting that another "rehabilitation" phase would start soon to strengthen security along the porous border area.