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Double bombing kills 11 at Pakistan police station
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 16 - 10 - 2009


A trio of suicide attackers,
including a rare female bomber, set off two blasts outside
a police station in a northwestern Pakistani city on
Friday, killing 11 people in the latest bloodshed in an
unrelenting wave of terror plaguing the country, AP reported.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the
bombing in Peshawar city, but suspicion fell on the
Taliban, who have been blamed for two weeks of attacks that
have killed more than 150 people across the country. The
violence appears aimed at forcing the government to abandon
a planned offensive into the militants' stronghold in South
Waziristan along the Afghan border.
The Friday afternoon attack targeted a heavily fortified
police station next to a mosque in the main city in
Pakistan's Taliban-riddled North West Frontier Province. A
car filled with explosives drove to the main gate of the
police station as a motorcycle carrying a man and a woman
pulled up behind it, Peshawar police chief Liaquat Ali Khan
said.
The woman jumped off and ran toward a nearby housing
complex where army officers live, while the man smashed the
motorcycle into the car, which exploded into a huge
fireball, he said. Police shot at the woman, who detonated
explosives she was wearing.
The impact of the blast destroyed part of the police
station and the mosque next to it, he said.
«If that woman suicide bomber had not been killed, she
might have caused more damage,» Khan said.
Television footage showed the upper part of the wall of
the brick mosque shorn off. Security forces swarmed the
area as ambulances arrived at the scene. A twisted chunk of
metal on the ground was in flames, and a small white car's
front section was destroyed.
In nearby Lady Reading Hospital, rescue workers rushed
wounded victims through the hallways on stretchers.
The blast killed 11 people, including three police
officers, two women and two children, Khan said. Another 15
people were wounded, including a criminal suspect who was
detained inside the police station at the time of the
attack, officials said.
Insurgents have sent attackers wearing military uniforms
to bypass security to carry out some of their recent raids.
But the use of a female suicide bomber is extremely rare
here and could signal a new tactic by the extremists.
In December 2007, what was believed to be the country's
first female bomber blew herself up near a Christian school
while apparently aiming for a military post in Peshawar.
There were no other casualties.
The newest violence came a day after militants launched
coordinated attacks on three law enforcement compounds in
the country's second-largest city of Lahore, killing 19
people as well as the nine attackers. Also Thursday, a car
bomb in Peshawar killed a small child at a housing complex
for government employees.
The attacks prompted top political and military leaders
from across the country to meet for a security strategy
session at the prime minister's residence in Islamabad on
Friday.
Two officials said initial investigations into the Lahore
attacks showed Taliban from the Afghan border region and
militants from Punjab were responsible.
«This was a well-coordinated Taliban operation supported
by local groups,» Umer Virk, head of the Lahore
anti-terrorist police, told The Associated Press.
The violence across the nation has fueled concerns that
the Taliban are forging links with other militant groups in
the country, an alliance that would vastly increase the
threats to the U.S.-allied government. Many ordinary
Pakistanis are anxiously questioning whether the state has
the ability to avert the danger.
Observers say Punjab's militant problem is most pervasive
in its south. But speaking to reporters in Lahore on
Friday, provincial Law Minister Rana Sanaullah played down
any such threat.
«The Taliban don't have any authority in southern Punjab,
and there is no need for any operation against them,» he
said.
Sanaullah, who said authorities had arrested some people
in connection with the assaults, also defended the
performance of security agencies during the standoffs, and
said previous intelligence about the possible attacks was
too vague to act upon.
The tactics used in Lahore were similar to previous
strikes blamed on the Taliban network in South Waziristan
and allied militants from Punjab, the nation's most
populous and powerful province. The methods include using
teams of gunmen carrying suicide vests.
The government has said the planning for the attacks is
often done near the Afghan border, while the foot soldiers
are recruited in Punjab. In claiming responsibility for
another recent attack, the Taliban said one of their cells
in Punjab had carried it out.
Pakistanis have grown less inclined to support the Taliban
over the past year, opinion polls have shown, but many are
expressing anger and helplessness over how to deal with the
strikes.
«The terrorists seem more committed to their cause than
the government is to eliminating them,» said Saima Ahmed,
33, a bank employee in the southern city of Karachi. «Our
inherent weaknesses, corruption, and inability to govern
the country are now exposed fully. It's total chaos all
over the country.»
The U.S. hopes that a Pakistani army operation in South
Waziristan will help break much of the militant network
that threatens both Pakistan and American troops across the
border in Afghanistan.
In Lahore, retired police officer Mohammad Sadique blamed
the U.S. for the problems.
«So long as the American forces are present in
Afghanistan, these terrorist attacks in Pakistan will
continue,» he said, adding that he condemned the strikes
because «no Muslim can kill his own brother or sister.»
The Pakistani army has given no time frame for the
expected offensive in South Waziristan. It has reportedly
already sent two divisions totaling 28,000 men and
blockaded the area. Analysts say that with winter
approaching, any push would likely have to begin soon to be
successful.


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