Is there a climate conference going on?
In Copenhagen, big companies from Siemens to Shell are making sure you know they care. Full Article | Full Coverage
Pakistan sets up Islamic court for restive region
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Authorities in northwestern Pakistan battling a Taliban insurgency announced on Saturday the establishment of an Islamic court.
Dar-ul-Qaza, an Islamic appellate court, was set up for the Malakand division of the North West Frontier Province (NWFP). NWFP authorities agreed in February to enforce Islamic sharia law there in the hope that militants would shun violence.
"Dar-ul-Qaza was the main demand and it has been met. Now there is no justification to take up arms," provincial information minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain told a news conference.
"But if they take up arms even after this announcement, keep on challenging the government and try to run a parallel government, then the government will stop them at all costs."
For the fifth consecutive day, security forces battled for control of Buner, a strategic valley in the region.
Military officials say around 250 militants and 12 soldiers have been killed in the operation. There was no independent confirmation of the claim.
Taliban forays into Buner, just 100 km (60 miles) northwest of the capital Islamabad, had sent jitters across Pakistan.
It also unnerved the United States which considers the stability of the nuclear-armed nation as vital for Washington's efforts to defeat al Qaeda and stabilize Afghanistan.
The security forces have taken control of Buner's main town of Daggar but militants still control parts of the valley.
On Saturday, the military said its forces had secured a major road leading to Daggar.
The United States has welcomed the Pakistani offensive and wants Pakistan to do more to fight home-grown militants who pose a threat to Afghanistan.
Elsewhere in the north, the security forces killed 16 Taliban in a counter-offensive in Mohmand tribal region bordering Afghanistan's eastern province of Kunar on Saturday. Two soldiers were killed in the Taliban attack.
In the neighboring Khyber tribal region, a Taliban commander wanted for attacks on convoys carrying supplies for Western forces in Afghanistan surrendered to authorities, officials said.
(Writing by Zeeshan Haider; Editing by Robert Woodward)











