Suspected militants abducted and killed an Afghan man in a tribal region in northwestern Pakistan on suspicion that he was spying for the US, an official said yesterday.
Villagers spotted the Afghan's bullet-riddled body early yesterday by a roadside and alerted authorities in North Waziristan, a tribal region near the Afghan border, area government officer Fida Mohammed said.
A note, written in the locally spoken Pashtu language, had been left with the body that identified the shooting victim as Malang, from Afghanistan's eastern Khost Province, Mohammed said.
Malang had been abducted on Wednesday from a bus station in Mir Ali, a town in North Waziristan, and some town residents who saw his body identified him as a weapon dealer, Mohammed said.
The note warned area tribesmen against spying for the US.
"People of Waziristan! beware, spies have come and they are spying for America," Mohammed quoted the note on Malang's body as saying.
Tribal Islamic militants, suspected of links with Afghanistan's Taliban militia, as well Arab, Central Asian and Afghan fighters -- allegedly linked with al-Qaeda -- operate in Waziristan.
In recent years, dozens of tribesmen and Afghans have been killed in suspected militant attacks after they were accused of spying for the US or collaboration with Pakistani authorities.
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