An ongoing military operation against Taliban fighters and their allies in the Pakistani tribal areas has triggered a mass exodus of residents from the area, with internally displaced people braving bombs, curfews and blocked roads to make it to the relative safety of neighboring districts, residents and officials have told Al Jazeera.
"When we set off to flee to Bannu [a neighboring district], we were unable to find transportation. At first, we walked for three hours on foot, and then we rented a car at three times the regular rate," said Muhammad Naseem Khan, 50, a resident of Mir Ali whose family of 30 is now staying with relatives in Bannu.
"There are five rooms and already 25 people living in the house. We are 30 people in our own family, and we are facing many difficulties," he told Al Jazeera, adding that he had received word from neighbors in recent days that his home in Mir Ali had been destroyed by bombs.
On Thursday, the local disaster management authority told Al Jazeera that it had registered more than 76,623 people fleeing the conflict since a curfew was loosened in the past 48 hours. The total number of civilians and others to have left the area, a stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) and other armed groups, has now risen to 137,856, local official Haseeb Khan told Al Jazeera. Most of the internally displaced people (IDPs) have headed to the Bannu district, in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, he said.
Pakistan's military said that it has killed at least 228 - all designated "terrorists" - in the military operation, dubbed "Zarb-e-Azb", so far. Most of those killed have been targeted in air strikes.
'No terrorists in my family'
Civilian casualties, however, have also been a concern, and the Islamabad-based FATA Resource Centre, which has done extensive work in Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), reported that at least 100 civilians have been killed since regular air strikes began in North Waziristan two weeks ago.
"There are no terrorists in my family, and yet my whole family has been killed," Noor Daraz Khan, a resident of the village of Mosaki, told Al Jazeera. Three missiles, apparently fired by Pakistani fighter jets, hit his home on May 21 , killing 24 family members, including 19 children, he said.
"There is no point in living in Pakistan," said the 45-year-old laborer, who now lives and works in Dubai. "All of my property there has been looted, my 10 cows have also been killed. It was even difficult to say the funeral prayers for my family, because there is shelling from the morning until night everyday."
Khan's family was killed in a preliminary wave of airstrikes against targets in North Waziristan, but military operations have been continuous since June 15, when the operation officially began. Those who left North Waziristan after the commencement of those hostilities say they faced many difficulties in escaping.
Muhammad Sajjad Khan, a 21-year-old university student from Mir Ali, said that the operation has "ruined" his education.
"I had given two exams when the curfew was imposed in the area, and then the bombing started. I was unable to return home and stayed with friends for about eight days. On the eighth day, after not being able to find a vehicle I borrowed a motorcycle from a friend and left Mir Ali," he said. The journey normally takes a few hours, but today he said he spent nine hours making the drive.
"There was a severe shortage of food and water, and I saw several people killed in an accident along the way. I saw three kids being brought to Bannu in a wheelbarrow."
No prior warning
Speaking on condition of anonymity, a military official with knowledge of the operation said that residents of North Waziristan had not been provided advanced warning before the military operation officially began on June 15, as air strikes had been occurring for several weeks beforehand. The army is holding off on a full scale ground offensive until civilians are able to evacuate the area, he added.
The army said that it has loosened a 24-hour curfew in North Waziristan since Wednesday, and opened up selected roads, in order to allow those looking to flee to leave the area. The military said it has also established areas where fighters can lay down their arms.
Residents looking to flee need to pass through multiple checkpoints, however, and they say that severely slows them down.
Strict security checks, a partial curfew and closures on certain routes make it difficult for many civilians to leave areas under threat, residents said.
"People are busy trying to get out, but there are no cars or routes open to take them," Khan Wazir, 33, a native of Mir Ali who has been living in Bannu for several years, told Al Jazeera. "Some of [my family members] have come, but there are quite a lot of them who are stuck there. It is difficult to find vehicles for them. We sent a car to get them, but they turned the car back from the checkpoint."
With the roads closed and a full curfew imposed, even during the first few days of airstrikes, many North Waziristan residents chose to flee to neighboring Afghanistan's Khost province, officials said. On Thursday, Pakistan's Foreign Office said in a press briefing that the Pakistani military was coordinating with Afghan authorities to ensure that fighters were not able to avail that escape route.
Government-run IDP camp empty
Officials with the FATA Disaster Management Authority (FDMA) said that they have set up a camp for the displaced in the area of Bakkakhel, along Bannu's border with North Waziristan, but that so far few have used its facilities.
"There are not so many people at the Bakkakhel camp, because they are preferring to stay with the host community at the moment. They prefer that option because they have homes and relatives in Bannu," said Haseeb Khan, the FDMA official, explaining why only four of thousands of available tents were currently occupied at the government's camp.
Registered IDPs will be provided with tents, dry rations, clean drinking water and a monthly allowance of $71 per family for food, he said. The FDMA is also providing vehicles to the political administration in North Waziristan to aid those attempting to flee, he said. Health officials say they are also providing polio vaccination drops to children leaving North Waziristan, the world's worst-affected district for the debilitating disease.
"Right now, the lower numbers of IDPs is because of the curfew and the closed roads," said Mansur Khan Mahsud, director of the FATA Resource Centre. "Once the roads open and the curfew is lifted, that number will double or triple."
Pervez Khattak, the chief minister for Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province, said on Wednesday that $9.7m has been allocated to aid IDPs fleeing the conflict.
"There is no need to request UN and other humanitarian organizations for help. The federal and provincial governments have sufficient resources to fulfill the needs of affected people," he told the media on Wednesday. Pakistan is already home to more than 2.2 million IDPs from previous military operations in the tribal areas, according to the FDMA.
PHOTO CAPTION
A soldier walks past trucks heading towards North Waziristan to bring refugees fleeing the military offensive against Pakistani militants, on the outskirts of Bannu, in Pakistan's Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa province June 19, 2014.
Al-Jazeera