Fighters killed in Khyber clashes
02/07/2009| IslamWeb

Dozens of Taliban-linked fighters have been killed during raids in the Khyber tribal region bordering Afghanistan and Pakistan, the Pakistani military has said.
"At least 28 militants of Lashkar-e-Islam were killed in shelling by helicopter gunships," Major Fazal Khan, a spokesman for the paramilitary unit, said on Thursday.
A statement from Pakistan's paramilitary frontier corps said tribesmen attacked Taliban hideouts in the Khyber region, killing a number of fighters.
Seven tribesmen were killed in the raid, prompting them to ask for army support, the statement said.
Night battles
Khan said the operation took place overnight in the Tirah valley of Khyber, one of Pakistan's seven semi-autonomous tribal areas through which flows the bulk of supplies destined for US-led and Nato troops in Afghanistan.
Mistri Gul, a spokesman for Lashkar-e-Islam, said: "Eight of our members were killed.
"We don't know about the rest, they might be civilians."
Pakistan government troops are locked in battles against fighters in parts of Pakistan's northwest where US officials have said al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked fighters are present.
Peshawar push
Pakistan poured paramilitary troops into Khyber in June last year to counter fighters threatening to take over Peshawar in the northwest, and to stop attacks on convoys supplying Western troops based in Afghanistan.
On the outskirts of Peshawar, a remote-controlled bomb ripped through a police patrol on Thursday, killing at least two policemen, Safwat Ghayur, the city police chief, said.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack.
Many of the most recent bombings in northwest Pakistan have been seen as attempts by Taliban fighters to avenge a two-month military offensive against the Taliban in three northwest districts that has been welcomed by the United States.
PHOTO CAPTION
Pakistani troops unload weapons from an army helicopter in Mingora, the capital of Swat valley, in May 2009.
Al-Jazeera