ISTANBUL, June 9 The Punjab government is coming out of denial about the threat from militants there, according to Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi.

Asked when the government might launch a crackdown on militant groups in Punjab, Qureshi said some lower level militants had been picked up and some eliminated.

“I think some major incidents have taken place in Lahore and woken the Punjab government up,” the minister said in an interview at the end of a regional summit in Istanbul.

“I think they are coming out of the denial that they were living in.”

Terrorist attacks on two Ahmadi places of worship in Lahore last month killed more than 90 people and outraged Pakistanis.

The Punjab government has been criticised in the past for shirking any confrontation with militant groups, who have been dubbed the Punjabi Taliban. Several militant groups thrive in the impoverished, rural areas of Pakistans heartland.

Qureshi said Pakistans next priority in the fight against the Taliban is the remote North Waziristan tribal region. He said the army was moving towards an offensive in North Waziristan in a “calculated fashion” after an earlier successful operation in South Waziristan.

“Our next priority is going to be North Waziristan but we have to time our operations in line with our resources,” he said. “At the moment we are consolidating our position in South Waziristan.”

Qureshi said Pakistans military successes in the tribal belt and areas like Swat and Malakand had forced some militant leaders to flee outside the Pakistan-Afghanistan theatre, and move to other countries with a known Al Qaeda presence.

“Our information is that they have gone into different areas, Somalia, Yemen and other destinations,” he said. “The tribal belt is no longer the safe haven that it used to be.”

Qureshi, who met his Afghan counterpart for confidence building talks in Istanbul on Monday, said relations had improved markedly in the two years since a democratic government took power in Pakistan.

Pakistan has lived in fear that a friendship between old foe India and Afghanistan posed a risk of encirclement.

Asked whether Indias presence in Afghanistan was still worrying Pakistan, Qureshi said; “The security challenges that Afghanistan faces can be helped more by Pakistan than India can help them. So I think that an exaggerated presence would not be in order.”

“We have to spend time to bridge the trust gap (with India) and think of confidence building measures that will restore the shaken confidence on both sides,” Qureshi said.—Reuters

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