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Pakistan Officials: Missiles Kill 12 In Northwest

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Pakistan Officials: Missiles Kill 12 In Northwest

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) ― A Japanese journalist was wounded in an apparent kidnap attempt in the frontier city of Peshawar on Friday -- the latest in a spate of attacks and abductions of foreigners in the city, police said.

Also on Friday, missiles apparently fired by U.S. unmanned aircraft hit a village near the Afghan border killed at least 12 people, including several foreign militants, Pakistani officials said.

The Japanese journalist was traveling with a Pakistani assistant in a car in Peshawar when gunmen opened fire, said police officer Mohammed Khan. He was identified as Motoki Yotsukura from the Asahi Shimbun newspaper.

Khan said Yotsukura was wounded in the leg. It was unclear how serious his assistant's injuries were. No other information was immediately available.

The United States has launched a surge in cross-border missile strikes over the last two months, part of a spiral of violence across northwestern Pakistan that includes a Pakistan army offensive against Taliban and al-Qaida militants and a wave of retaliatory suicide bombings.

Friday's attack happened in North Waziristan, a Pakistani tribal region and stronghold of Taliban and al-Qaida fighters suspected of mounting attacks on U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Three Pakistani intelligence officials told The Associated Press that at least two missiles hit a house in Ghari Wam, a village about 18 miles from the frontier, early Friday morning.

Two officials said the death toll was 12, including several suspected foreign militants. Their exact identity was not immediately clear. Taliban gunmen had cordoned the area and removed the bodies, one official said.

Another official put the toll at 13 and said that 10 of them were foreigners.

The officials cited reports from agents and informants in the area and the different tallies could not be reconciled immediately. They asked for anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the media.

Washington rarely confirms or denies involvement in the attacks.

Security appears to be crumbling in Peshawar, a strategically vital city and a hub for Western-funded relief work in the region, where extremists have found a firm foothold among an impoverished and isolated population.

Gunmen abducted an Iranian diplomat in Peshawar on Thursday, a day after an American aid worker was ambushed and killed in the city.

(© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)