Missile strike reported in Pakistan

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At least five people have been killed in a missile attack by suspected US drones in Pakistan's North Waziristan tribal region on the Afghan border, according to Pakistani intelligence sources.

 
The AFP news agency quoted Pakistani security officials as saying that the missile strike hit a compound, belonging to a Taliban member, late on Saturday.
 
The US is suspected in at least 11 missile strikes on the Pakistan side of the Afghan border since mid-August, killing more than 100 people, most of them alleged fighters, according to an Associated Press (AP) count based on figures provided by Pakistan intelligence officials.
 
"Two missiles struck a compound just outside Miranshah," a security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
 
The targeted compound was the residence of Taliban member Omar Daraz, the official said.
 
There was no immediate confirmation of the strike from the Pakistani military or from US-led forces in Afghanistan.
 
A similar suspected US missile strike on a house in the same district on Thursday killed nine people including six Arab fighters, according to security officials.
 
Orakzai burials
 
Elsewhere in Pakistan, mourners on Saturday buried victims of a suicide bombing near the border that targeted anti-Taliban tribesmen moving to evict fighters from their region.
 
Asghar Khan, a government official, told AP that authorities had tallied at least 34 bodies, but that as many as 25 other bodies may have been taken away by relatives in Orakzai, one of Pakistan's seven semi-autonomous tribal regions.
 
Some media reports put the death tally from the Friday attack much higher.
 
One unconfirmed TV report late on Saturday said 113 people died in the bombing.
 
'Hideouts' destroyed
 
A security official said that Friday's attack occurred a day after tribesmen had targeted two hideouts belonging to pro-Taliban groups operating in the area.
 
It also came a day after four tribal elders in Bajaur, a tribal region north of Orakzai, were abducted and beheaded after attending another pro-government meeting, officials said.
 
"People will tell you that Pakistan is already in a state of war. Every day there are suicide bombings," Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder, reporting from the North West Frontier province, said.
 
"The violence is escalating at a time that the national assembly is not able to come to grips with the situation."
 
PHOTO CAPTION
 
Pakistani men look at the US air strike site in Gora Prai in June 2008.
 
Al-Jazeera

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