The  video shows the policemen lined up on a hillside with their hands tied  behind their backs, standing in front of armed Taliban fighters wearing  scarves to hide their faces. Both the policemen and the insurgents are  wearing shalwar kameez, the baggy shirt and pants common in Pakistan and  Afghanistan.
One of the insurgents accused the men of executing six children from Pakistan's Swat Valley by firing squad.
"They are the enemies of the religion of Allah," the man said of the police officers.
 He  and several other fighters then opened fire on the policemen, who  crumpled to the ground. Several of them were still moaning, and one  fighter walked down the line shooting the policemen in the head.
He  and several other fighters then opened fire on the policemen, who  crumpled to the ground. Several of them were still moaning, and one  fighter walked down the line shooting the policemen in the head.The video was posted on the LiveLeak video sharing website and included a note saying the policemen were captured when the Taliban  staged a cross-border raid from Afghanistan on June 1 in Pakistan's  northwest Dir district. The video was first reported on by The Long War  Journal website.
Pakistan army  spokesman Maj. Gen. Athar Abbas confirmed the contents of the video and  said the Taliban fighters who executed the policemen came from the Swat  Valley, an area that used to be controlled by the militant group. The  Pakistani military launched a large offensive in Swat in 2009, but many  of the fighters slipped across the border into Afghanistan.
Hundreds  of Taliban fighters crossed into Upper Dir on June 1 from Afghanistan's  eastern Kunar province. They killed at least 30 members of the security  forces over three days of fighting before being forced back across the  border by the military, Abbas said.
The  Pakistani military has accused Afghan and NATO forces of not doing  enough to target Taliban sanctuaries in Kunar, where the U.S. withdrew  most of its forces over the last year.
Afghanistan  and the U.S. have level similar accusations against Pakistan, saying it  must do more to target sanctuaries on its side of the border filled  with militants who regularly launch attacks against NATO troops in  Afghanistan.
The Afghan  government has also accused Pakistan of firing hundreds of rockets into  Kunar over the past few months and killing at least 40 people — an  allegation denied by Pakistan.
 

 
 
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