A suspected US drone attack in northwest
Pakistan has killed six people just outside of the country's remote
tribal region, Pakistan authorities confirmed.
Pakistani police and security officials said there were at least two Afghan militants among the dead.
The missiles hit an Islamic seminary in Hangu district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province early Thursday morning.
Fareed
Khan, a police officer, said the unmanned aircraft fired at least three
rockets at the madrassa in the Hangu district just before sunrise.
The
attack is the second to hit the outside the tribal area. Most drone
strikes occur in the lawless North Waziristan region where Taliban
insurgents are holed up, and are rare in densely populated places like
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
The two Afghan militants killed in the strike were believed to be from the Haqqani network.
The
previous drone strike in Pakistan on 1 November killed Pakistani
Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud in the militant stronghold of Miranshah
in northwest Pakistan, in an attack denounced by Pakistan.
The
attack took place a day after Pakistan's foreign policy chief Sartaj
Aziz was quoted as saying that the United States had promised not to
conduct drone strikes while the government tries to engage the Taliban
in peace talks.
The identities of those killed on Thursday were not immediately clear.
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