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Police: Suicide bombing kills 88 in NW Pakistan

RIAZ KHAN and ASIF SHAHZAD   01/ 1/10 10:26 PM ET   AP

Pakistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suicide bomber detonated his explosives-packed vehicle in a crowd of people watching a volleyball tournament in northwest Pakistan, killing 88 people in the deadliest attack in the country in more than two months.

The attack in Lakki Marwat city on Friday appeared to be retaliation against residents who formed militias to drive militants out of the area and a meeting of anti-Taliban leaders being held nearby may have been the actual target, police said.

The blast underscores the difficulty Pakistan has had in stopping militants whose reach extends far beyond Pakistan's lawless tribal belt and who appear increasingly willing to strike civilians as well as security forces.

The attack was not far from South Waziristan, where the army is waging an offensive against the Pakistani Taliban. That operation has provoked apparent reprisal attacks that have killed more than 500 people since October.

No group claimed responsibility for Friday's blast, but that is not uncommon when large numbers of civilians are killed.

"The locality has been a hub of militants. Locals set up a militia and expelled the militants from this area. This attack seems to be reaction to their expulsion," local police chief Ayub Khan told reporters.

Khan said an anti-Taliban meeting of local tribal elders in a mosque close to the field where the tournament was being held was the real target of the attack, but the driver failed to reach it.

The bomber set off some 550 pounds (250 kilograms) of high-intensity explosives loaded in the car at the field, which lies in a congested neighborhood, Khan said.

Local police official Tajammal Shah said Saturday taht 88 people were dead and 50 wounded. He said eight children, six paramilitary troops and two police were among the dead.

Omar Gull, 35, a paramilitary soldier who was wounded, told an AP photographer at a nearby hospital that the attacker drove the vehicle recklessly into the crowd.

"People were just trying to understand what's happening when the bomb went off," he said. "It was then chaos. It was smoke, dust and cries."

Another police official, Habib Khan, said some 300 people were on the field when the incident took place.

"We had security there. We had it for the meeting, and for the tournament," Ayub Khan told The Associated Press by phone.

Regional Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain reiterated the government's resolve to target militants wherever they may be, saying "we need to be more offensive to fight them."

The attack was the deadliest since a car bomb killed 112 people at a crowded market in Peshawar on Oct. 28.

Karachi, the country's largest city, came to a virtual standstill Friday after religious and political leaders called for a general strike to protest a bombing that killed 44 people and subsequent riots.

The city's major markets, stores and business centers were closed, along with financial institutions that had already planned to shut for New Year's Day. Public transportation was halted and gas stations were closed.

Monday's bombing occurred in the midst of a procession of minority Shiite Muslims during the Islamic holy month of Muharram. Afterward, angry protesters went on a rampage, setting fires to about 2,000 stores that took three days to completely put out.

Interior Minister Rehman Malik, on a visit to Karachi, said investigators were still determining if the attack was a suicide bombing.

He also questioned the claim of a purported Taliban spokesman, Asmatullah Shaheen, that the militant group was behind the attack. Local news reports on Friday quoted a more prominent Taliban spokesman, Azam Tariq, as denying that the Pakistani Taliban's central leadership had approved the attack, though he did not rule out the possibility that Shaheen's group had carried it out without approval.

Also Friday, a suspected U.S. missile struck a car carrying alleged militants in North Waziristan tribal region, killing three men, two intelligence officials said. It was the second such strike in less than a day.

The strikes are part of the U.S. campaign to eliminate high-value militant targets that use Pakistan as a safe haven to plan attacks in neighboring Afghanistan and on the West.

Friday's strike happened near Mir Ali, a major town in the region, two intelligence officials said on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record. Shortly afterward, Taliban fighters arrived at the scene of the attack in the village of Ghundi and moved the bodies to an undisclosed location, the officials said.

Thursday's missile strike was also near Mir Ali, hitting a house and killing three people.

U.S. officials rarely discuss the strikes, and Pakistan publicly condemns them, though it is widely believed to aid them secretly.

Elsewhere in the northwest, a roadside bomb exploded near a car in the Bajur tribal region, killing an anti-Taliban tribal elder and five of his family members, said Nasib Shah, a local government official.

Bajur was the focus of a 2008-09 army offensive but still suffers some militant violence. Tribal leaders who support the government against the Taliban are frequent targets of attacks.

___

Shahzad reported from Islamabad. Associated Press Writers Habib Khan in Khar, Rasool Dawar in Mir Ali and Ashraf Khan in Karachi contributed to this report.

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suicide bomber detonated his explosives-packed vehicle in a crowd of people watching a volleyball tournament in northwest Pakistan, killing 88 people in the deadliest atta...
PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suicide bomber detonated his explosives-packed vehicle in a crowd of people watching a volleyball tournament in northwest Pakistan, killing 88 people in the deadliest atta...
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05:58 PM on 01/03/2010
I beg of you, mainstream Muslims, start speaking out against this madness.

Your silence has gone on too long. Who better to start a movement against this violent destruction than fellow Muslims.
03:04 PM on 01/03/2010
Japan was our bitter enemy in the 30's and 40's. We dpopped two bombs, and now Japan is one of America's closest allied countries.
02:01 PM on 01/03/2010
I say we nuke em
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10:37 AM on 01/03/2010
The saddest part of this article?

"......._killing 88 people in the _deadliest _attack in the country in more than two months."

Two months. sigh......
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satanlite
If ur neibor wtchs Fox Nws wtch ur neibor
01:44 PM on 01/03/2010
That was my take as well. They have their equivalents of our 9/11 every week or so. That level of violence will come over here as soon as our economy gets bad enough. When Republicans have succeeded in destroying the middle class and concentrating al the wealth and opportunity in the upper 5% of the population our society will claw itself apart. No good jobs, wages and salaries calculated to survival level, a true Republican future. Then they'll claim someone else did it to them.
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10:36 AM on 01/03/2010
The saddest part of this article?

".......killing 88 people in the _deadliest attack in the country in more than two months."

Two months. sigh......
10:21 AM on 01/03/2010
Islamic sects have killed and tortured their own since the beginning of the worship of Allah. Just depends who's the governing sect. And we think we in the West can convince the Fanatical Muslim to cooperate with us?
11:35 AM on 01/03/2010
no.......let them kill each other off........he1l arm them better
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Opygollopy
The more I talk to people, the more I love my dogs
09:40 PM on 01/02/2010
Muslims killing Muslims. The Taliban are not a very enlightened group. The collateral damage they are causing is also creating another form of damage. They will be hated even more now that they are killing innocents everywhere. This is not warfare, it is unnecessary carnage and for what. The majority of Muslims want peace.

The Taliban and A. Q. have harmed so many needlessly that soon, they will have no allies. People who work with you out of fear are not allies and that is all they have. They will implode soon and it is an end of their own making.
11:04 PM on 01/02/2010
True.
The same also applies for America.
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satanlite
If ur neibor wtchs Fox Nws wtch ur neibor
01:49 PM on 01/03/2010
"People who work with you out of fear are not allies and that is all they have"

Every dollar going into the sinkhole of the ME, no matter what country you select, is money being distributed to our enemies. Every crop of opium that gets processed and moved out of the country is money distributed to our enemies. Until we get out of that area we will be financing groups and individuals who have nothing better to do but to plan how to attack and kill Americans, here and abroad.

People who work with you because you pay them are not allies and that is all we have.
09:22 PM on 01/02/2010
He is driving a truck, fully aware that he is going blow himself up. The truck moves slowly because the crowd is dense. Around him are women with the younger of their children. The older ones running around carefree in the knowledge that it's a gathering of their own people for the most part, villagers going about the scene no different than they would at the weekly market gathering. The driver detonates the bomb he is transporting - why, at that very moment? What is it that makes him choose this moment? Is there a face he recognizes - a similar face that recalls for him some pain from his past. Is it revenge that leads him to erupt along with his truck? Is there pride? Or has it just come to this: the pressure of his act, the pressure of the responsibility that his handler has placed on his shoulders. Does he know full well that by killing these women and children that he is hurting their male kin in a worse way than killing the men would hurt their women. What drives him to commit what must be despicable were it to happen to his loved ones?
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CoronaDischarge
Fired Up! Ready to go!
06:52 PM on 01/02/2010
This kind of ignorant nihilism serves no purpose than to ensure that the population of Pakistan will be resolving itself to exterminate these elements from their country.
06:04 PM on 01/03/2010
Long overdue.
05:46 PM on 01/02/2010
Faith ultimately will lead us down a path of destruction... I pray it's not too late for humanity.
05:40 PM on 01/02/2010
I feel immense respect for the citizens and tribal elders of the Pakistani village of Shah Hasan Khel who reportedly have decided to continue to defy the Taliban even as they face the killing of 100 of their fellow citizens in the New Year's Day car bombing attack at the volleyball game in their village. May they continue to find courage in their fight to defeat the tyranny and murderous ways of the Taliban.
11:05 PM on 01/02/2010
May Pakistan succeed.
05:39 PM on 01/02/2010
Faith in action... It's abhorrent and disgusting... They're were kids there!!

This just proves time and time again... absolute horrid traits that god seems to inspire people to commit against each other.
05:08 PM on 01/02/2010
Good.Let them kill themselves- Hopefully they will blow their backward nations and themselves, into oblivion.
05:22 PM on 01/02/2010
Why such hatred? Sounds like it is very personal to you? Pakistan has been a tried and true ally in the region. It supported our fight against the USSR. It continues to fight the extremists but it is caught between the real threat of the extremists on one side and its need for geopolitical safety from India which is arming groups in Afghanistan.
05:48 PM on 01/02/2010
Why such tolerance? Why be so tolerant that your willing to tolerate intolerance?
06:07 PM on 01/03/2010
dissanayake is talking about the terrorist suicide bombers, some of whom happen to be Pakistanis, not Pakistan.

Personal? I hope so. Woe the day that such senseless killing is no longer personal.
05:29 PM on 01/02/2010
or the stone age.........oh that's right they are already there
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Nicholas Roy
04:11 PM on 01/02/2010
Discusting pigs of human beings!
11:38 AM on 01/02/2010
Ultimate cowardice act. Killing innocents.
03:32 PM on 01/02/2010
Yup-like those CIA drones do.
05:36 PM on 01/02/2010
So that just makes all right all around then doesn't it!?
06:22 PM on 01/03/2010
Luckily, we have leaders who understand the necessity of fighting back.