Los Angeles Times

U.S. airstrike kills Pakistani Taliban leader

- By Sultan Faizy and Shashank Bengali

Mullah Fazlullah, who ordered the 2012 shooting of then-schoolgirl and future Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, dies along with two other militants when a drone strikes their car.

KABUL, Afghanista­n — A U.S. drone strike killed the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Mullah Fazlullah, the elusive militant who ordered the assassinat­ion attempt on then-schoolgirl and future Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, Afghan and Pakistani officials said Friday.

Afghan defense ministry spokesman Mohammad Radmanish said that Fazlullah was killed along with two other militants and a driver when their car was struck in the eastern Afghanista­n province of Kunar, along the Pakistani border, shortly after midnight Thursday.

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani confirmed the news in phone calls with Pakistani leaders.

Fazlullah was buried within hours in Kunar, where he had been based for several years, said a Pakistani intelligen­ce official, who requested anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the media.

U.S. forces in Afghanista­n said they conducted a strike targeting “a senior leader of a designated terrorist organizati­on” in the border region Thursday but offered no additional details. The Pakistani Taliban did not immediatel­y comment on the reports.

Fazlullah was also believed to be responsibl­e for the 2014 attack on an armyrun school in Peshawar, Pakistan, that left more than 130 children dead. He helped preside over a reign of terror in Pakistan’s Swat Valley for years, ordering his men to kill and mutilate anyone who he believed opposed his extremist interpreta­tion of Islam.

“Mullah Fazlullah’s death is huge news,” tweeted Omar Waraich, deputy South Asia director for Amnesty Internatio­nal. “He terrorized the Swat Valley, ordered the assassinat­ion attempt on Malala, killed barbers, DVD [shop] owners, dancing girls, Sufi mystics.”

He was best known for directing the shooting of Yousafzai, an outspoken activist for girls’ education, as she sat on a school bus in Swat in 2012, when she was 15. She and two classmates were shot but survived, although she had to be taken to Britain for treatment after a bullet lodged in her head.

In 2014 she won the Nobel Prize, and this year she made an emotional return to Pakistan for the first time since the shooting.

Fazlullah’s death, announced on the eve of the Muslim holiday Eid al-Fitr, offered a moment of good feeling between Pakistan and Afghanista­n. Each country has accused the other of failing to crack down on Taliban militants who roam freely across the rugged, lawless border region.

Ghani called Pakistan’s army chief and Prime Minister Nasirul Mulk to confirm Fazlullah’s death, which Mulk said “underscore­s the importance of dealing with terrorists that threaten the security of both countries,” according to a Pakistani government statement.

Mulk said Pakistan supported Ghani’s declaratio­n of a temporary cease-fire against Afghan Taliban insurgents during Eid, saying it “would help pave the way for the Afghan peace process.”

shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Faizy reported from Kabul and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India. Special correspond­ents Aoun Sahi in Islamabad, Pakistan, and Zulfiqar Ali in Peshawar, Pakistan, contribute­d to this report.

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