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Today on Geo news.
Taliban already lost the war on political front - ANP Leader.
Taliban already lost the war on political front - ANP Leader.
Military forces are building in the region after a peace agreement in the area all but collapsed as soldiers exchanged fire with militants.
"We have asked residents to leave their areas because security forces may engage militants and we want to avoid civilian casualties," said a senior official from the area, Khushal Khan Khattak.Clashes between security forces and militants in the north-west of Pakistan's have already created hundreds of thousands of refugees who have sought sanctuary in badly-supplied camps.
Residents of Mingora, Swat's main town, said militants had surrounded a paramilitary force base at a power station in the town and others had taken up positions on buildings and were patrolling streets.
"Security forces beat back militant attacks on Mingora police station and a power grid station," said a military spokesman.
"The city is under control and security forces are patrolling... We will crush these militants," he added.
The February peace pact, under which authorities agreed to a Taliban demand for introduction of Islamic sharia law in the former tourist valley, led to accusations from critics both at home and abroad that the government was caving in to militancy.
The Taliban refused to give up their guns and pushed into Buner district, only 60 miles northwest of Islamabad, and Dir, another district adjacent to Swat last month, where they have fought with security forces.
President Asif Ali Zardari is due to meet President Barack Obama and the Afghan president, Hamid Karzai, in Washington on Wednesday for talks on the growing militant threat in the region.
The US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, last month accused Islamabad of abdicating to the Taliban while Mr Obama expressed grave concern the government was "very fragile" and unable to deliver basic services.
The New York Times reported at the weekend that US officials are attempting to bolster the government by broking a power-sharing deal between Mr Zardari and the conservative opposition leader, Nawaz Sharif.
Late night senior US senators unveiled plans to expand and overhaul civilian US aid to Pakistan.
But the US national security adviser, General James Jones, told the BBC that Washington needed further guarantees about the security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, despite reassurances that the weapons are out of Taliban reach.
Earlier today, a suicide car-bomber killed four security men in an attack on a check post near the main northwestern city of Peshawar. Pakistanis urged to leave Swat valley ahead of military operation - Telegraph