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NATO tankers torched in new Pakistan attack: officials

Uighur activists criticise Chinese premier on Turkey visit
Istanbul (AFP) Oct 9, 2010 - Activists from China's Uighur minority demonstrated in Turkey for a second day Saturday against Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, who continued his visit in Istanbul for a meeting with the president. Riot police deployed to keep around 40 demonstrators away from Wen's hotel and prevented smaller groups joining the protest against China's treatment of the Muslim Turkic-speaking Uighur people in its Xinjiang region. Protesters shouted "Wen assassin" and "Wen get out of Turkey", and held up a banner that said: "Turkey, do not believe China's lies". Wen was also confronted by about 100 Uighur demonstrators in Ankara on Friday, the first day of his visit to Turkey as part of a tour of Europe.

Turkey accepts China's sovereignty over Xinjiang, but last year heavily criticised the deadly violence in the region, which it described as "atrocities". Wen was due to meet President Abdullah Gul and business leaders in Istanbul before leaving Turkey. Before the meetings, he visited the sixth century Hagia Sophia Church and nearby Blue Mosque, the Anatolia news agency reported. He walked through the church, listening to the history of the Byzantine basilica which was converted into a mosque in 1453 after the Ottomans conquered Constantinople, today's Istanbul. It became a museum in 1935. The Chinese leader moved on to the 17th century Blue Mosque under heavy police escort. Wen met Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Ankara on Friday, when the two countries reached a raft of agreements and pledged to raise their trade to 50 billion dollars by 2015 from an expected 17 billion dollars this year.
by Staff Writers
Quetta, Pakistan (AFP) Oct 9, 2010
Gunmen Saturday torched at least 29 oil tankers in southwest Pakistan, the sixth attack in just over a week as Islamist militants continue to target a NATO supply route into Afghanistan.

Two police officers were wounded in the attack in the remote Mitri area, 180 kilometres (112 miles) southeast of Quetta, the capital of oil and gas rich Baluchistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan.

Taliban militants have launched a series of similar attacks to avenge a new wave of US drone strikes targeting rebels in the rugged border region of northwest Pakistan.

"Some 30 gunmen attacked the tankers, which were parked outside a roadside hotel and opened fire early Saturday morning, injuring two local police officials," Abdul Mateen, a senior administration official in Mitri, told AFP.

He said the fire engulfed 29 tankers, adding that firefighters were called in from the nearby town of Sibbi to extinguish the blaze.

"We will be able to have a precise idea about the losses only after the fire is brought under control."

Mateen said the tankers, which were on their way to Afghanistan, had stopped in Mitri overnight.

Abdul Qadir, an employee at the roadside hotel told AFP: "I was fast asleep and got up with sound of intense firing.

"When I came out, I saw a group of armed men warning other employees and vehicle drivers to stay away. The gunfire was so intense that it triggered massive fire engulfing all tankers that were parked in front of the hotel," Qadir said.

Baluchistan's home secretary Akbar Durrani said the fire gutted all 29 tankers.

Nobody has so far claimed responsibility for the latest attack, which came three days after militants torched more than 40 NATO oil tankers and containers in the northwestern city of Nowshera and in Quetta.

"It is difficult at this point of time to fix responsibility on any group. What I say right now is that those who torched the tankers were terrorists," Mateen said, adding gunmen also fired a rocket at the burning tankers.

Mohammed Barwan, an assistant driver for one of the burnt vehicles, told AFP: "The gunmen were armed with Kalashnikovs. We were sleeping near our trucks when these men came and ordered us to leave our vehicles."

"I could see some of the men, who had covered their faces with masks," he added.

Taliban rebels have carried out five attacks on NATO supply vehicles in Pakistan in the past week to avenge an intensified wave of US drone strikes targeting Taliban and Al-Qaeda militants in the northwest.

Pakistani authorities have reported 26 drone attacks since September 3 which have killed more than 140 people in the lawless region which Washington calls the global headquarters of Al-Qaeda and the most dangerous place on Earth.

The strikes have been linked to a US plan to disrupt an alleged plot by extremists to launch Mumbai-style attacks in Europe.

The latest tanker attack came as the main land route for NATO supplies crossing from Pakistan to Afghanistan at Torkham in the northwest remained closed for 10th day running.

A second border crossing at Chaman in southwest Pakistan remains open, a customs official said.

Pakistan shut the route at Torkham in protest at a cross-border NATO helicopter attack which killed at least two Pakistani soldiers who were mistaken for militants.

US ambassador to Pakistan Anne Patterson Wednesday apologised on behalf of the American people over what she called the "terrible accident".



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