About Gazette To the editor Subscribe Contact Us
Board Chairman Logo Editor-in-Cheif
News
News
World News
Region News
Home News
Opinion
Editorial
Comments Opinion
Features
Health
Technology
Gazette Fourm
Tourism
Business
Sports
World
'Pakistan will not admit foreign troops'

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan is committed to supporting the US-led global coalition fighting Al-Qaeda and the Taliban but will not allow allied foreign forces to operate on its territory,

Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani said yesterday.“The international war against terrorism is our own war,” he said in a televised address focused on the performance of his three-and-a-half month old civilian coalition government.“(But) we will not compromise on the sovereignty of Pakistan. No foreign power will be allowed to take action on Pakistani soil any decision and any action within the frontiers of Pakistan will be taken by us with full responsibility,” he told the nation.Pakistani is undergoing a precarious transition to civilian rule, with President Pervez Musharraf, who came to power as a general in a 1999 coup, taking a lower profile.But the new coalition, led by the party of assassinated former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, is faced with multiple problems, including an Islamic armed groups threat, an economy in trouble, plus power and grain shortages.Washington backs its strategy of using tribal elders to persuade fighters to give up fighting, but worries that Taliban groups have used the breathing space provided by talks to intensify cross-border attacks on Western forces in Afghanistan.Gilani's comments came amid growing fears in Pakistan that the United States may take a unilateral action against militants' sanctuaries in the border areas. Residents of Pakistani tribal areas on the Afghan border have reported an increased activity of pilotless US drones. Pakistani intelligence officials, and villagers near the border of North Waziristan and Afghanistan's Khost province said last week large numbers of Western troops had been airlifted in and had begun building scores of bunkers along the frontier.


printPrint This Page sendSend to a friend

Do you expect an Israeli and US attack on Iran before the American presidential elections in November?

Yes

No

I don't know

       Previous poll results

Do you think bio-fuels are to blame for the soaring food prices?

Yes               85          per cent

No                10          per cent

I don't know   5        per cent

 Email your response to: gazette-editor@hotmail.com

Prayer's Times
 
Today's weather
 
Exchange Rate