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Suicide bike bomber kills 25 in Pakistan garrison city

Tuesday, 3 November 2009


RAWALPINDI, Nov 2(AFP): A suicide bomber targeted workers queuing for their salaries outside a Pakistan bank and hotel Monday, killing 25 people as the United Nations pulled expatriate staff from the northwest.
The second bombing to kill ordinary civilians in less than a week, the attack near the army headquarters in the garrison city Rawalpindi, showed the enormity of the threat that Al-Qaeda-linked militants pose in Pakistan.
The explosion outside a building housing a bank and the four-star Shalimar Hotel showered the area with human flesh, smearing blood on the ground and shattering windows, said witnesses.
"We were sitting on the second floor of our office. It was a huge blast," Raja Sher Ali, a marketing manager in a local company, told AFP.
"Our building shook as if in an earthquake and when we came out there was smoke everywhere and body parts were thrown into our office," she said.
A surge in bloodshed left more than 300 people dead last month as Pakistan presses a major offensive against the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) in the tribal belt, where US officials say Al-Qaeda are plotting attacks on the West. A senior police official said the attack was the work of a suicide bomber.
"The suicide bomber came on a motorcycle and blew up close to people gathered to get salaries. We found parts of a suicide vest and some body parts of the suicide attacker," senior police official Aslam Tarin told reporters.
Deeba Shehnaz, a rescue workers spokeswoman, told AFP from the site that "the death toll has risen to 24" with another 24 people wounded.
The attack off Mall Road was close to the upmarket Pearl Continental Hotel and near Pakistan's army headquarters, where 10 gunmen kept up a nearly 24-hour siege last month that left 23 people dead and deeply embarrassed the military.
The plummeting security saw the United Nations announce Monday it was pulling out international staff from northwest Pakistan, just days at least 118 people were slaughtered in a car bomb in its capital Peshawar.
"They will be relocated. Immediately," Ishrat Rizvi, a UN spokeswoman, told AFP, unable to say immediately how many staff the decision affected.