Pakistan's displaced head home, blast rocks village

2009年 07月 14日 03:26 JST
 

By Kamran Haider

JALOZAI CAMP, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistan began on Monday to send home about two million people who fled their homes two months ago because of an army assault on Taliban militants in the Swat valley.

But a blast at a suspected militant explosives cache in Punjab province and the arrest of 13 suspected al Qaeda militants in the southwest served as a reminder of the scale of the challenge the government still faces in fighting insurgency and sectarian violence. Thirteen people were killed.

The army launched the offensive in Swat in late April after militants took over a district just 100 km (60 miles) from Islamabad, raising fears for Pakistan's stability.

The ensuing exodus was one of the biggest human migrations of recent times, stretching Pakistan's resources to breaking point and prompting a global appeal for humanitarian help.

The military says it has now pushed the Taliban out of their former bastion of Swat, northwest of Islamabad, and the government is keen to move the displaced back to their homes.

Assured that it is safe, a few are starting to venture home.

In the dusty tent camp of Jalozai, already baking hot in the early morning sun, buses and trucks were lined up on Monday to take a first batch of people back to their homes.  続く...

 
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殺人ビデオに映った容疑者を逮捕

イタリアの警察は19日、今年5月にナポリで発生した殺人事件で、目撃者の協力を呼びかけるため事件発生時の映像を公開していたが、この映像に映っていた容疑者を逮捕したと発表した。
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貸し渋り問題に注目が集まって見逃されがちなだが、現在の日本には中小企業へのリスクマネー供給の課題がある。
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