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Pakistan Deploys Its First Homemade Drone 'Burraq', Kills Three Militants In Shawal Valley

Pakistan Deploys Its First Homemade Drone 'Burraq', Kills 3 Terrorists
French Air Force Mirage 2000 jet fighter takes off for a mission to Libya on Monday, April 11, 2011, at Solenzara 126 Air Base, on Corsica Island. Libyan government forces battered the rebel-held citay of Misrata with artillery fire on Monday despite an announcement by African mediators hours earlier that Moammar Gadhafi had accepted their cease-fire proposal.(AP Photo/Jacques brinon)
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French Air Force Mirage 2000 jet fighter takes off for a mission to Libya on Monday, April 11, 2011, at Solenzara 126 Air Base, on Corsica Island. Libyan government forces battered the rebel-held citay of Misrata with artillery fire on Monday despite an announcement by African mediators hours earlier that Moammar Gadhafi had accepted their cease-fire proposal.(AP Photo/Jacques brinon)

ISLAMABAD — A missile-firing Pakistani drone has killed at least three suspected militants in the first ever reported use of the indigenously developed aircraft in combat, the military said on Monday.

The deployment of the drone will add a new layer of complexity to a debate on the use of drones in Pakistan where the government has officially denounced numerous strikes by U.S. drones on militants over the past decade.

The "Burraq" drone attacked a suspected militant hideout in the Shawal Valley, which has long been a militant stronghold on the border with Afghanistan, said Major General Asim Bajwa, the military's chief spokesman.

"Hit a terrorist compound in Shawal Valley killing (three) high profile terrorists," Bajwa said in a posting on his Twitter feed. He did not say when the drone strike happened or give any more details.

Militants in the area identified one of the three people killed in the Sunday night strike as Nizam Wazir, a faction leader allied with the Pakistani Taliban. Wazir was being buried on Monday, they said.

Government forces launched an offensive against Pakistani Taliban militants in semi-autonomous ethnic Pashtun regions along the Afghan border last year.

The military expanded the offensive into the Shawal Valley last month, with the use of both ground troops and aircraft.

The government has for years denounced U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan as a violation of sovereignty, although there has been suspicion the government has quietly given the green light to at least some of the attacks, especially those on Pakistani Taliban leaders.

U.S. drones have killed more than 2,400 people in Pakistan since 2004, according to the independent London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which monitors strikes through news reports.

The U.S. strikes have enraged many members of the public in Pakistan, fuelling anti-U.S. sentiment and anger towards Pakistani governments seen as too accommodating of U.S. demands in its war on militancy.

Pakistan first successfully tested the Burraq drone in March with the military hailing it as "a force multiplier in the anti-terror campaign".

The military deployed two Pakistani-produced unarmed surveillance drones in 2013. Analysts say Pakistan's drones look very much like drones from Pakistan's close ally, China.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.