Pakistan detains 22 suspects after airforce base attack by Taleban

Emergency workers wheel an injured man to a hospital after an attack on an air force base in Peshawar, Pakistan, September 18, 2015. PHOTO: REUTERS

PESHAWAR (AFP) - Twenty-two suspects have been detained in connection with a deadly attack on a Pakistan air force base claimed by the Taleban, officials said on Saturday (Sept 19).

Pakistani Taleban militants dressed in official uniforms attacked the air force base near the north-western city of Peshawar on Friday, killing at least 29 people, most of them soldiers, the group's deadliest assault in months following a major military offensive against them.

All 14 attackers were also killed, the military said.

"At least 22 suspects including eight Afghan nationals have been detained from different parts of the city since Friday after the attack, and are being thoroughly interrogated," a senior local police official Shakir Bangash told AFP.

He said some of the suspects were set free after an initial interrogation while others, including the eight Afghans, are still in custody.

A senior security official told AFP that evidence was still being collected from the site of the attack to find more clues about how the incident happened and how the attackers entered the camp.

The insurgents entered the residential compound at the base, attacking a mosque where they killed 16 air force personnel as they were about to offer dawn prayers.

Another seven air force personnel were also killed in a barrack adjacent to mosque. Three from the army and three civilians were also killed.

Military spokesman Major General Asim Bajwa said on Friday the attackers belonged to a splinter group of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and came from Afghanistan.

"The attackers came from Afghanistan, the attack was planned and controlled from there," Bajwa said.

The TTP claimed responsibility for Friday's attack in an email sent to journalists, saying their "suicide unit" carried out the attack.

Islamabad and Kabul regularly accuse each other of supporting militants who cross the porous border to carry out attacks and of giving sanctuary to them.

Afghanistan in particular accuses Pakistan of supporting Afghan Taleban insurgents, while Pakistan has been demanding Afghanistan hand over hardline cleric Fazlullah, head of the TTP who is believed to be hiding in eastern Afghanistan.

The air force has played a key role in the operation against militant hideouts in the tribal areas on the Afghan borders, pounding targets in countless sorties since the onslaught began in June last year.

The army launched the "Zarb-e-Azb" operation in June 2014 in a bid to wipe out militant bases in North Waziristan tribal area and so bring an end to the bloody decade-long Islamist insurgency that has cost Pakistan thousands of lives.

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