Aerial photographs of Mingora this week showed deserted streets

Pakistan's army says it has regained control of the Swat valley's main town, Mingora, after Taliban rebels decided not to put up a pitched battle. Army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas told the BBC that the centre of Mingora was under military control, although there were still skirmishes on the outskirts. Fighting intensified a week ago as troops moved in, advancing house by house against the rebels. Journalists are banned from the area so it is hard to verify army reports. Hundreds of people have been killed and more than two million have fled the Swat valley since the operation against the Taliban was launched after a peace deal broke down earlier this month. See a map of the region The army's latest declaration comes days after a lethal bombing in Lahore, which was later claimed by Taliban as revenge for the Swat operations. Although the military has always had bases in Mingora, the city was in effect under Taliban control in recent weeks. The army reported taking key intersections a week ago and fighting is said to have been fierce in the city which was only recently home to more than 300,000 people. 'More fight' "They [the Taliban] had prepared Mingora city... with bunkers but when they realised that they were being encircled and the noose was tightening, they decided not to give a pitched battle," said Gen Abbas. Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. But he emphasised he was only talking about Mingora and said there was "much more fight[ing]" to be done in the valley. Work, he added, was already beginning to restore essential services to Mingora. The city hospital was being re-opened, he said, with a team of 21 doctors and adequate medical supplies. Gas had also been restored and some mobile generators had been provided for the water system. It would take at least two weeks to restore the electricity network, the general said. As the army aims to clear Taliban strongholds and supply depots in Swat's mountains, soldiers are battling militants in towns where many thousands of civilians are believed to be hiding. The government has also advised residents to leave the town of Charbagh, a Taliban stronghold 20 miles (32km) north of Swat, in advance of an attempt by the military to move in there, AFP reported, quoting unnamed military sources. Following the attack in Lahore, and in Peshawar a day later, Pakistan increased its reward for a Taliban chief to 50m rupees ($600,000, £372,000). The figure is more than 10 times the original bounty for radical cleric Maulana Fazlullah - believed to be the architect of a two-year uprising in the Swat valley intended to enforce Sharia law.

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