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Pakistan pounds Taleban positions Pakistan pounds Taleban positions
(about 1 hour later)
Pakistani helicopter gunships and warplanes have been bombing suspected Taleban militants in the north-western Swat Valley, the military says.Pakistani helicopter gunships and warplanes have been bombing suspected Taleban militants in the north-western Swat Valley, the military says.
Thousands of civilians continue to flee the area, with fighting especially heavy in the town of Mingora.Thousands of civilians continue to flee the area, with fighting especially heavy in the town of Mingora.
A son of the cleric who brokered a deal aimed at ending clashes is reported killed in shelling in a nearby area.A son of the cleric who brokered a deal aimed at ending clashes is reported killed in shelling in a nearby area.
On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama vowed to "defeat al-Qaeda" and its allies in Pakistan and Afghanistan.On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama vowed to "defeat al-Qaeda" and its allies in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
He was speaking after talks in Washington with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.He was speaking after talks in Washington with Afghan President Hamid Karzai and Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari.
'Mortar''Mortar'
Cleric Sufi Mohammed acted as a mediator between the government and Taleban forces in the north-west.Cleric Sufi Mohammed acted as a mediator between the government and Taleban forces in the north-west.
See a map of the region See a map of the region
He organised a recent peace deal in the Swat valley which has now broken down amid heavy fighting.He organised a recent peace deal in the Swat valley which has now broken down amid heavy fighting.
Family members say that Kiffayatullah was killed in the Daro area of Lower Dir late on Wednesday night. Family members say that the cleric's son, Kiffayatullah, was killed in the Daro area of Lower Dir late on Wednesday night.
"My brother was in his house when a mortar fell on it and he was killed," another son, Zia ul-Islam, told the BBC."My brother was in his house when a mortar fell on it and he was killed," another son, Zia ul-Islam, told the BBC.
Sufi Mohammed's son-in-law was also injured in the attack.Sufi Mohammed's son-in-law was also injured in the attack.
There has been no word from the military or the Taleban in relation to the death.There has been no word from the military or the Taleban in relation to the death.
The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Islamabad says that the death of Kiffayatullah is likely to exacerbate an already tense situation in the north-west.The BBC's Syed Shoaib Hasan in Islamabad says that the death of Kiffayatullah is likely to exacerbate an already tense situation in the north-west.
Crossfire
A curfew has once again been lifted to allow civilians to leave Swat and join the tens of thousands who have already moved into camps or the homes of relatives further to the south.
Thousands have fled the fighting
All are desperate not to get caught in the crossfire.
Residents says that at least 24 civilians have lost their lives in the past two days.
Some died when their houses were hit by artillery, while others were reportedly shot for defying a curfew.
Ayaz Khan, from the Kanju area of Swat told the AP news agency that he loaded his family into his car early on Thursday but that rocks, boulders and tree trunks had been laid across the roads, forcing him to turn back.
"I am helpless, frustrated and worried for my family," he said.
A health worker living in Mingora also told AP that militants had warned her to stay in her home.
"During the whole of Wednesday night , I heard firing, and again this morning," she said.
Troops moving into the valley have been attacked by remote controlled bombs, while the army says it has killed dozens of militants.
It says that it has re-captured emerald mines in the Shahdara area, near Mingora, which were being operated by the militants.
Much of the fighting has focused on a hill which overlooks Mingora. The army says that the Taleban have seized key buildings inside the town.
'Humanitarian crisis'
The BBC's M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says that troops moving into Swat face resistance all along the 40km (25-mile) road that heads in a north-easterly direction from Malakand to Mingora.
Our correspondent says that fighting has not only erupted in several areas around Mingora, but there are also reports of more clashes in the neighbouring area of Buner.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has meanwhile warned that a humanitarian crisis is intensifying in north-west Pakistan.
In a statement the ICRC said that it no longer had access to the areas most affected by the conflict and that precise statistics of the displaced were difficult to ascertain.
"The ICRC and the Pakistan Red Crescent Society are currently marshalling their resources to be able to provide for 120,000 internally displaced people, affected by the fighting, with food and essential relief items," it said.