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Pakistan vs. NATO

December 12, 2011

Unidentified gunmen have attacked NATO oil tankers in south-western Pakistan, killing one driver and injuring another before setting fire to at least five vehicles.

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Afghanistan-bound trucks carrying supplies for NATO forces parked at a closed border post in Pakistan
Sitting ducks: stranded NATO trucks provide an easy target for militantsImage: dapd

The trucks, which had been carrying supplies for NATO troops in Afghanistan, came under fire on Sunday after being forced to turn back before crossing the border. Pakistan closed its borders to NATO convoys in the wake of the NATO air strikes on November 26, which killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

Sunday's convoy was approached by around eight gunmen on motorcycles, a senior local police official told AFP. The gunmen ordered the convoy to stop and started firing at the tankers. With Pakistan's closure of its borders with Afghanistan entering the 17th day, hundreds of trucks have been forced to turn back to the Arabian Sea port of Karachi in the south, providing a target for militants on the way.

Meanwhile, Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has told the BBC that the blockade would not be lifted until "new rules of engagement and cooperation with the United States" had been set, the reference being to the November 26 incident which Pakistan still considers to have been a deliberate attack.

Author: Arun Chowdhury (dpa, AFP)
Editor: Sarah Berning