Pakistan suicide attack kills 17
December 09, 2010 00:00:00
A shopkeeper awaits customers in a shop advertising MTN airtime sales in Umlazi township in Durban — Reuters Photo
PESHAWAR, Dec 8, 2010 (AFP): At least 17 people were killed in a suicide attack on a market in the northwestern Pakistan of Kohat Wednesday, a senior police official said.
The explosion took place at a busy bus terminal in the garrison town's main Tirah bazaar, Kohat police chief Dilawar Bangash told AFP.
"It was a suicide blast. The death toll has risen to 17," he said, adding that 25 others were wounded, seven of them seriously.
It is the latest bombing in a long series of attacks in Pakistan blamed on networks linked to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.
Local police spokesman Fazal Naeem said the bomber approached the door of a bus carrying passengers to the nearby tribal district of Orakzai and detonated his explosives.
Television footage showed two damaged passenger vans parked at the terminal. A woman was crying while people tried to console her.
Earlier it appeared the bomb was planted in a vehicle parked at the main bus stand, but Bangash said that "now we have found the head and legs of the suicide bomber".
Bangash said it was not immediately clear who was the target. The victims were both Sunni and Shiite Muslims, he said.
The blast, the third in as many days, is part of a new wave of bombing after a brief lull.
A double suicide bombing in the tribal district of Mohmand near the Afghan border killed 43 people Monday.
Police said two suicide bombers dressed in police uniform attacked a meeting of anti-Taliban militiamen and pro-government elders in Ghalanai, about 175 kilometres (110 miles) northwest of Islamabad.
A purported spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for that attack, threatening death to anyone who forms militias against the Islamists.
On Tuesday a suicide bomber tried to kill the chief minister of Pakistan's southwestern province of Baluchistan, damaging his motorcade but leaving the minister unhurt, officials said.
The blast wounded nine people near the convoy of Nawab Aslam Raisani in Quetta, the capital of a province where separatist, sectarian and Taliban violence has surged this year.
A purported spokesman for the banned extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed responsibility, saying Raisani had been targeted for efforts to provide security to Shiite Muslims, who are frequently attacked in Baluchistan.