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'13 dead' in new attack on Pakistan Islamic party

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'13 dead' in new attack on Pakistan Islamic party

By Lehaz Ali (AFP) – 5 hours ago

CHARSADDA, Pakistan — A suicide bomb blast targeting an Islamic party chief killed at least 13 people in Pakistan Thursday, officials said -- the second attack against him and his supporters in two days.


The bombing took place in the northwestern town of Charsadda, close to the convoy of Maulana Fazlur Rehman, leader of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (JUI-F) party.

"At least 13 people were martyred including four police officials and 42 others were wounded in the suicide bombing," senior administration official Ajmal Khan told AFP.

"The bomber was on foot and he jumped on the main road in front of the police vehicle and detonated his explosive when the convoy of Maulana Fazlur Rehman was coming," Khan said.

Rehman and his companions were unharmed, senior police official Nisar Khan Marwat told AFP, adding that the politician had gone to the town to address a party meeting.

Rehman's party spokesman Asif Iqbal Daudzai confirmed that the party chief and other leaders were not hurt, but two security guards travelling in the vehicle in front were wounded.

"Maulana Fazlur Rehman and others are safe, their vehicle was damaged in the bomb blast," Daudzai told AFP.

An AFP reporter at the site of the blast said the bombing left seven shops and three vehicles wrecked, with walls scarred by blood spots and pellet marks.

Fruit from nearby stalls littered the ground, scattered among quantities of broken glass.

"I was sitting in my shop when a I heard an ear-splitting blast. I saw a fireball on the road and then smoke filled the area. I was not hurt but I have difficulty in hearing now," fruit vendor Shaukat Khan told AFP.

It was the second attack on Rehman and his supporters in as many days.

On Wednesday a suicide bomber on a motorcycle blew himself up near a police checkpoint, killing 10 people and wounding more than 20 in the northwestern town of Swabi, some 60 kilometres (37 miles) east of Charsadda.

Rehman was on his way to a public meeting in Swabi when that blast happened.

It was not immediately clear why Rehman, a federal MP and chairman of Pakistan's parliamentary committee on Kashmir, was being targeted.

Senior provincial minister Bashir Bilour told reporters that he could not comment on who was behind the blast, but said that Taliban militants were trying to destabilise government by attacking politicians.

"Taliban want to destabilise the government and they do not want the politicians to meet the people," Bilour said.

Rehman's party walked out of the national ruling coalition on December 14 after Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani sacked one of its three cabinet ministers over a war of words with religious affairs minister Hamid Saeed Kazmi, who was also fired.

The spat related to a corruption scandal over accommodation for tens of thousands of Pakistani pilgrims that reportedly implicated Kazmi's ministry.

Rehman has demanded Gilani's resignation, and has also led rallies that forced the government to abandon possible changes in the country's blasphemy law.

"Terrorists have no religion. If they can bomb mosques, they can attack religious and political leaders also," provincial information minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain told AFP.

"Every politician is under threat here," he said, referring to frequent militant attacks on government and security officials and places of worship in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhawa, which borders Afghanistan.

More than 4,000 people have died in suicide and bomb attacks throughout Pakistan since government forces launched an offensive against militants in a mosque in Islamabad in 2007.


Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants launch almost daily attacks across northwest Pakistan and the tribal belt that Washington has branded the most dangerous place on Earth.

AFP: '13 dead' in new attack on Pakistan Islamic party
 
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the situation is so complex, he was the major facilitator of the talibans... you never know who is on whose side, and for how long !!
 
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the situation is so complex, he was the major facilitator of the talibans... you never know who is on whose side, and for how long !!

It is not complex.
It is two organisations namely RAW and RAMA behind all this terrorism.

Pakistan army need to break its silence and shall go public with all the evidence they have.
 
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The chickens have truly come to roost. The 'interlocutor' who said he could offer negotiations with the Taliban attacked, twice.

Attacks on Pro-Taliban Politician Point Toward Intra-Jihadi Divide

Maulana Fazlur Rehman, a leading Pakistani Islamist politician, was the target today of a second suicide bombing attack in as many days. The attacks on Fazl, who heads his own faction of the Jamiat Ulema-e Islam, a pro-Taliban Deobandi party, come days after State Department cables provided by WikiLeaks to The Hindu reveal that he wanted to mediate between the United States and the Taliban outside of Pakistan in 2007.

No group has claimed responsibility for the two atacks, but they are most likely unsuccessful assassination attempts by irreconcilable Pakistani jihadists who disapprove of his attempts to engage the United States and push for a political settlement for the war in Afghanistan. Fazl, the bearded, burly son of a prominent Pakistani cleric and politician, is known to be a smooth political operator and has been on the Pakistani Taliban’s hit list since 2008.

This week’s attacks on Fazl are the latest in a series of violence that suggest a deepening intra-jihadi war inside Pakistan. On one side are jihadists aligned with al-Qaeda and its borderless conflict; on the other are jihadists and their supporters who cooperate with the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment and see jihad as an instrument of state policy or believe that the Pakistani state is an effective agent of jihad.

This intra-jihadi conflict is best demonstrated by the recent execution of Colonel Imam, a former Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) officer who worked with Afghan militants in the 1980s and 1990s but also spoke out against the Pakistani Taliban in recent years. A Pakistani Taliban video showed the Afghan Taliban supporter being shot at point-blank range as the organization’s amir, Hakimullah Mehsud, watches approvingly.

While the Pakistani military-intelligence establishment (PakMIL) seeks the formal integration of its allies within the Afghan Taliban into the power structure in Afghanistan, it has no such plans inside its own country for the Pakistani Taliban. A political settlement in Afghanistan could leave the Pakistani Taliban as the odd man out — hence their attacks on those who support the Afghan Taliban but oppose the Pakistani Taliban.

An alternative but far less probable explanation for the attacks on Fazl is that they are intentional near misses by the PakMIL designed to serve as deadly warnings to Fazl to not play his own game and unilaterally engage the United States on the Taliban. According to the State Department cable, Fazl wanted to serve as an intermediary between the United States and the Afghan Taliban — but outside of Pakistan. This could cut the PakMIL out of the picture, if he was not covertly speaking on its behalf. As the arrest of Mullah Baradar demonstrates, the PakMIL has reacted and will continue to react strongly when it is believes it is being excluded out of an Afghan settlement.

With that said, the cable is now outdated. Fazl’s outreach to the United States occured nearly five years ago, and in recent months, he appears to have re-aligned with the PakMIL to put pressure on the secular Awami National Party (ANP) and Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP). For the PakMIL, he and his party remain essential counterweights to the ANP in the Pashtun belt and inevitable players in talks with both the Afghan Taliban and reconcilable elements of the Pakistani Taliban.

Fazl has used the attacks as an opportunity to rally his base. Playing the anti-American card, he blamed the United States and also held his political rivals, the ANP and PPP, responsible for the attacks. In preparation for possible early parliamentary elections later this year or early next year, Fazl has held large rallies on contentious issues, such as the blasphemy law, and hosted a dinner party with representatives of a broad spectrum of opposition parties.

Ever the political machinator, Fazl is trying to leverage in this life two near-early trips to the next one. Despite his tough public face, the maulana is probably praying that his third strike won’t be coming anytime soon.

http://pakistanpolicy.com/2011/03/3...-politician-point-toward-intra-jihadi-divide/
 
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