Peshawar Bombing Kills 49 Near Crowded Market (CAUTION: GRAPHIC PHOTOS)

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First Posted: 10- 9-09 08:17 AM   |   Updated: 10-10-09 08:10 AM

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan — (AP) A suicide bomber blew up his vehicle near a crowded market in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing 49 people and pushing the country closer to an offensive against militants in their main stronghold along the Afghan border.

The attack, which wounded more than 100 people in Peshawar, was Pakistan's deadliest in six months and was a reminder of the ability of insurgents to strike in major cities despite operations against them and the death of their leader in a U.S. missile strike.

CAUTION: GRAPHIC IMAGES

The blast was heard several miles (kilometers) away and left the charred skeleton of a bus flipped on its side in the middle of the road, next to the twisted remains of a motorbike. Passers-by pulled out the wounded and the dead, including a young girl wearing an orange dress who was heading to a wedding with family members.

One man staggered from the scene, his face covered with blood. People rushed to cover the bodies of victims whose clothes were burned off.

"I understood for the first time in my life what doomsday would look like, " said Noor Alam, who suffered wounds to his legs and face and was at a hospital overrun with other casualties.

Peshawar Police Chief Liaqat Ali Khan said the attacker was in a car packed with a "huge" amount explosives and artillery rounds. There was no claim of responsibility for the bombing, the target of which was not immediately apparent. Militants typically attack government, military or Western targets, but blasts have taken place in public places before.

Zafar Iqbal, a doctor at the main Peshawar hospital, said 49 people were killed and more than 100 wounded. Seven children were among the dead.

"I pray to Allah, please destroy all these people who are killing the innocents," said Sher Akbar from his hospital bed. "People were crying. They were in pain. I thought we were all are dying."

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The United States is pushing Pakistan to take action against insurgents using its soil to fuel the insurgency in neighboring Afghanistan. The army has carried out some offensives in the northwest this year, killing many militants and earning it measured praise in the West, but the insurgents have responded with scores of suicide attacks.

The army has confirmed it is prepared to launch a major offensive in South Waziristan, a region along the Afghan border consider the fountainhead of suicide attacks and other militant activity in Pakistan. It has not given a date for the launch.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the attack meant the country now "had no other option but to carry out an operation in South Waziristan."

"We will have to proceed," he told a local television station. "All roads are leading to South Waziristan."

The bombing came just days after a Taliban suicide attacker evaded tight security to kill five people at the office of the U.N.'s World Food Program in the capital, Islamabad and two weeks after another explosion killed 11 in another part of Peshawar.

Malik said authorities had arrested a man alleged to have been the "handler" of the U.N. bomber. He gave no more details.

Also Friday, militants ambushed a tanker carrying fuel for U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan at a gas station near Peshawar, torching it, said Fazal Rabi, a police official. No deaths or injuries were reported in the attack, which highlighted the vulnerability of the American-led mission in landlocked Afghanistan as Washington debates sending more troops.

Pakistani Taliban have often targeted U.S. and NATO supply convoys passing through northwest Pakistan for Afghanistan, though there have been less attacks reported recently. Most of the nonmilitary supplies for foreign troops in Afghanistan are unloaded at Karachi sea port and are then trucked in through the northwest.

Pakistan's army has launched three operations in South Wazirstan since 2001 but each time has been forced to abandon the push amid fierce resistance. U.S. missile strikes and Pakistani mortar and jet bombings have hit targets there over the last year, but no ground operations have been launched.

One such U.S. attack in the region in August killed Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud. The group has since named a new leader, Hakimullah Mehsud. He has threatened suicide attacks and said his men were preparing to repel any push into South Waziristan.

___

Associated Press writers Munir Ahmad and Asif Shahzad contributed to this report from Islamabad.

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — (AP) A suicide bomber blew up his vehicle near a crowded market in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing 49 people and pushing the country closer to an offensive against ...
PESHAWAR, Pakistan — (AP) A suicide bomber blew up his vehicle near a crowded market in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing 49 people and pushing the country closer to an offensive against ...
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I'm not religious, is it Islam? Ignorance? Hate? How could you think god would reward you for this? Looks Satanic to me! Can you reason with people who think like this?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:37 PM on 10/12/2009
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why as humans do we do these things to each other !

it is just that I expect more from us humans

I have become weary of the death and destruction !

so weary ! some times you can,t help but feel the despair !

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 10/11/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 297 fans permalink
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Interior Minister Rehman Malik said the attack meant the country now "had no other option but to carry out an operation in South Waziristan­."
----

Somehow I think this was the plan all along. More IDP's, and attacks from the army, and so on. I wish I had a better solution to this cycle of violence, but the words from left-leaning Pakistani politicians against both the Taliban elements and using force which threatens civilians have left me unconvinced - though I agree with them in spirit. Unfortunately, the real things that could help the common folk, like infrastructure and social service improvements in FATA, are thwarted by these very extremists.

On the other hand, while this is in no way to give encouragement or celebration of innocents hurt and dying, there might be a little solace to be taken that every new attack like this further solidifies the Pakistani people against these terrorists. The bigger problem, of course, is this dance factions within the ISI and Rawalpindi may still be playing with them, and the (entirely predictable) diversion of military aid to the Indian border.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 AM on 10/11/2009

Pakistani intelligence is aiding the Taliban against our boys in Afghanistan. But they created a monster they can't control anymore. The Pakistanis probably thought they got a victory by bombing the Indian embassy in Kabul 3 days ago. But that attack only killed 14 Afghan Muslims and not a single Indian. And yesterday 49 people were killed in a suicide bombing in the Pakistani city of Peshawar. And now this. The Pakistanis have to make up their mind. Either they are against terror or they are not.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 10/10/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

The Islamic world is in a death spiral...n­o doubt about it.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:57 AM on 10/10/2009
- Sensiblebg I'm a Fan of Sensiblebg 32 fans permalink

Just tell them Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize and Im sure they'll
stop

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:34 PM on 10/09/2009
- janeycat I'm a Fan of janeycat 75 fans permalink
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how horrable for you to say that...peo­ple died...whe­re is your heart

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 PM on 10/09/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 297 fans permalink
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Why would they when they hate him as much as Rush?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 AM on 10/11/2009
- jsarets I'm a Fan of jsarets 171 fans permalink

There can be no winners or losers in humanity's struggle with terrorism.

We continue to struggle with murder. We continue to struggle with theft. We continue to struggle with poverty. Thousands of years of civilization, and we still face the same struggles. It never ends.

If there is no ending, then there can be no winner. We will never defeat terrorism. There will always be elements of society that resort to these tactics to call attention to their perceived grievances.

Terrorists are bullies. The best way to deal with bullies is to withhold from them what they want most, which is attention and reaction. They do this in the hope that we'll overreact.

Imagine if we had taken a different approach in the aftermath of 9/11, when for once it seemed the entire world was pro-American. If only we saw it as a horrible crime and not an act of war.

We want Osama Bin Laden. Deliver him to a U.S. embassy for a ransom of $100 million USD.

That's how you deal with foreign criminal fugitives on that level. Wouldn't the Pakistani ISI have delivered OBL in short order? No matter who you used to be, you're nobody if you have a huge ransom on your head. He wouldn't have been safe in any cave.

But instead we sent in the storm troopers, and here we are today.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 10/09/2009
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re. "We want Osama Bin Laden. Deliver him to a U.S. embassy for a ransom of $100 million USD."
This is chump change. Pakistanis are getting 1.5 billion per year.
They will be protecting OBL for as long as it takes.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 10/09/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

Osama is long dead.....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 AM on 10/10/2009
- witchband I'm a Fan of witchband 19 fans permalink
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By the way, how are we doing on that 'spreading democracy throughout the Middle East' thing?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 10/09/2009
- Horst I'm a Fan of Horst 24 fans permalink

These people are prepared to kill children at a crowded marketplac­e.....no hopoe for them.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 10/10/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 297 fans permalink
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More like Central/South Asia.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:00 AM on 10/11/2009
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Tragic. Religion once again, is as depicted here Crippling Humans, we need to learn acceptance before we can have peace, Death and Hatred are curses that have plagued mankind for far to long, we need to evolve and move forward.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 10/09/2009
- dargay I'm a Fan of dargay 2 fans permalink

This attack killed Muslims so how is religion to be blamed ? This is the Wahhabi ideology of alqaeda.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 10/09/2009

You are proof that religion can dumb you down.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 AM on 10/10/2009
- Khirad I'm a Fan of Khirad 297 fans permalink
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To clarify, fundy "religion".

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:11 AM on 10/11/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 241 fans permalink
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This article was posted 4 days ago:

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20091005/D9B55KK01.html

It gives a lot of insight into the Pakistan Taliban, what they want, who they are:

>Hakimullah ... saying there were no "difference between Taliban of Afghanistan and Pakistan." He said the Pakistani Taliban were fighting for the imposition of Islamic law in Pakistan and to rid it from the "clutches of the Americans and the Jews."

Hakimullah is the leader of the "Taliban" troops in Waziristan.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:24 PM on 10/09/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

The one who is still alive?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 10/09/2009
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

wadenelson1 from durango

meet

durango from durango

How nice that your are talking to each other.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 10/09/2009
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

oops

"how nice you are talking to each other"

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 10/09/2009
- andyboy I'm a Fan of andyboy 75 fans permalink

Quick 40,000 troops to Peshawar. We must police other countries that refuse to do it themselves. Issue blank checks to all tribal leaders direct from Treasury in return for show of co-operation. Everybody's Happy! American dollars are the best. Praise Allah.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:27 PM on 10/09/2009
- wijg I'm a Fan of wijg 37 fans permalink
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... trying to draw the U.S. into Pakistan. Will they succeed? Will it be the final nail in our economic c off in?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 PM on 10/09/2009
- wijg I'm a Fan of wijg 37 fans permalink
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... trying to draw the U.S. into Pakistan. Will they succeed? Will it be the final nail in our economic coffin?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 10/09/2009

Pakistan is soon to be a failed state. They don't even control large portions of their own territory. we cannot allow that to happen.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 10/09/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 241 fans permalink
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What is your proposed solution?

At this point a military draft would be required to open a 3rd front.

Are you suggesting it's time for America to REALLY go to war, to protect the government (primrarily the army) of Pakistan, and its nukes, from falling into the hands of the Pakistani taliban?

I'm not disagreeing or arguing with you, I'm just asking if you REALLY realize the implications of what you are saying.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 10/09/2009
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

Better intelligence and more drone and air strikes

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 10/09/2009

we might have to in order to secure the countries nuclear weapons...­.. if they do collapse.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 10/09/2009
- dargay I'm a Fan of dargay 2 fans permalink

A failed state is one which completely collapses and requires international input. Pakistan is not sucha case. Rather it is a struggling state trying to solve its problems.

If the US can help with training, equipment, funding it is welcome.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 10/09/2009
- Durango I'm a Fan of Durango 144 fans permalink

Also, last i noticed a democracy, as flawed as that may be. (The USA is in no position to throw rocks on that one).

After a long military dictatorship.

Everyone should recall that the Rule of Law finally prevailed in Pakistan.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:49 PM on 10/09/2009

it is #7 on a list of soon to be failed states....­....

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 10/09/2009
- henryberry I'm a Fan of henryberry 37 fans permalink
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I don't think it's coincidental that this especially powerful and deadly terrorist incident occurred shortly following reports that Obama was likely to approve a troop increase in Afghanistan while also turning the focus to Al-Qaeda in Pakistan.

The message would consist of several elements: The terrorist act in a major Pakistan city would show the presence of terrorists beyond the border area where the U.S. would be concentrated. It was in retaliation to Pakistan for any such agreement with the U.S.; or even in allowing such a possible agreement to be entertained. There has been word that Al-Qaeda was in decline even as the Taliban was gaining in Afghanistan. So if Al-Qaeda was behind the bombing, this would challenge this assessment. If it was the Taliban, they would be showing they would not be confined to Afghanistan as Obama seems to assume. The main message the bombing sends is that whatever decisions or changes in strategy Obama likely in communication or cooperation with Pakistan makes, this will have practically no impact on the terrorism in the region. There may be changes to types and locations of incidents, as there has been before--and can always be expected in response to whatever the U.S. tries to do.

After eight years of U.S. meandering and flailing in the AfPak region, there is no indication that the terrorists will not continue to stay one step ahead of the U.S.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 10/09/2009
- Ping I'm a Fan of Ping 63 fans permalink

I refuse to accept your premise that a bunch of terrorists driving car bombs can defeat the US military. It has been and always will be a matter of will and determination. If the US want to win WE can do so ....easily­.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 10/09/2009

We can if we made the current ROE less restrictive. We're basically fighting with one hand tied up.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:12 PM on 10/09/2009

we can if we made the current ROE less restrictive. we're basically fighting with one hand tied behind our back......­. we need less restriction.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 10/09/2009

You have to check if the local parties want US to win...The ruling class (military / govt) is usually more interested in keeping strife alive by fanning divides and hatred. What you are seeing now is the result of years of divide and rule policy. By keeping their population uneducated, unemployed and dependant, they ensure their power gets all encompassing. In regions like this, a third party like US or UN may not get its pulse on the undercurrents and therefore maynot entirely succeed. It may win the battle but lose the war.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 10/09/2009
- henryberry I'm a Fan of henryberry 37 fans permalink
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I'm not setting out a premise, but voicing an observation. After eight years, it's obvious that the U.S. has not defeated terrorism nor even begun to defeat terrorism. There are many signs of this. But I'll point to only one here: Namely, McChrytal's request for more troops. Why would he ask for tens of thousands of more troops if the U.S. had the upper hand?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:45 PM on 10/09/2009
- dargay I'm a Fan of dargay 2 fans permalink

This attack is to send a message to Pakistani state,not to launch impending offensive in South Waziristan, which has been the center of gravity of all terror/extremism in Pakistan since 2004/05. Also they killed lots of civilians which these Taliban types just like to do.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 10/09/2009
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