Indigenous Pakistan drone kills three in first attack: Military

Indigenous Pakistan drone kills three in first attack: Military
Updated 07 September 2015
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Indigenous Pakistan drone kills three in first attack: Military

Indigenous Pakistan drone kills three in first attack: Military

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s military on Monday said it had for the first time deployed a locally-manufactured drone to kill three insurgents in its restive northwest, in what one analyst termed a “significant development” for the country’s defense capabilities.
Pakistan announced the successful test flight of the ‘Burraq’ drone, which is capable of delivering laser-guided missiles, in March, joining a handful of other countries in possessing the technology.
“1st ever use of Pak(istan) made Burraq Drone today. Hit a terrorist compound in Shawal Valley killing 3 high profile terrorists,” Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Asim Bajwa said on Twitter.
The Shawal valley, situated in the lawless North Waziristan tribal district that borders Afghanistan, has been the scene of some of the fiercest fighting between Pakistani forces and the Taliban since the launch of a massive military operation there last June.
The area is off-limits to journalists and it was impossible to verify the military’s claims independently.
So far, the United States, Israel, Great Britain and Pakistan have used armed drones in combat, according to a report by the New America Foundation, though several other countries are developing their own programs including Pakistan’s arch-rival India.
Pakistan’s unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) “bear resemblance to Chinese armed Rainbow CH-3 drones,” according to the report.
Shaukat Qadir, a retired brigadier-turned-analyst, said: “It’s a significant development. We have been hearing about the development of this weapon system for quite sometime.” Qadir added that Pakistani drones are now set to play an important role in its more than decade-long battle against militancy within its borders, which began after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan in 2001 caused Taliban and Al-Qaeda fighters to flee across the border.
Drone technology was pioneered by the United States, which today is thought to have around 200 armed UAVs that have killed thousands in conflict zones across the globe after the 9/11 attacks.
The attacks are controversial among rights groups because of the allegedly high numbers of civilian casualties and lack of transparency over who is targeted and why.
In 2013, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch issued a joint report which said US officials responsible for the secret CIA drone campaign against suspected terrorists in Pakistan that began in 2004 may have committed war crimes.
Islamabad officially opposes US strikes in its territory, terming them a violation of its sovereignty, though leaked documents in the past have shown the two countries worked together on the campaign.