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Explosion in Karachi

Karachi market fire still raging

KARACHI: The fire on Bolton Market buildings lighted by the enraged people after the suicide blast in central mourning procession, could not be extinguished thus far, Geo News reported Tuesday.

The intense fire caused a potion of the affected building to fall down.

Following the suicide blast yesterday on tenth of Muharramul Haram in the central mourning procession, the over 1100 shops, godowns and offices were gutted.

Also, three banks and over 70 vehicles around MA Jinnah Road were torched.

The inferno at Bolton Market was brought under control after continuous efforts lasting for four hours; however, the blaze soon raged again after some moments. The clouds of smoke are still seen hovering over the markets including Bolton Market.

Meanwhile, a part of two-storey building caved in due to the intense fire. The low-intensity explosions are being heard even today owing to the chemicals housed at some shops.

The security personnel stationed there are trying to keep people off the affected sites.

Meantime, two more vehicles have been set ablaze in Korangi and Pehalwan Goth today’s morning.

Karachi market fire still raging - GEO.tv
 
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I don't want to offend anyone but these people were wearing black 'shalwar kameez' and had those small pointed steel rods used for breaking ice which they used for breaking the locks and then they had some kind of chemical which they used for setting fire to the shops after looting them.
My cousins shop was the first shop in the belt that was attacked, it was an arms shop from which they got plenty of arms and rounds, the 'chowkidar' who lives right above the shop started shouting at them and these guys fired at him. When my cousin got there they were breaking the cabinets and taking out weapons, they took his fathers phone who was making their video and deleted the file, media personal were attacked for making their footage.
It was all pre-planned.

Yes! This was pre-planned to Blast and burn the shops by terrorist.
The people in Juloos had keep continue their juloos even after the blast.
 
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Yes! This was pre-planned to Blast and burn the shops by terrorist.
The people in Juloos had keep continue their juloos even after the blast.

Yes whoever these people where, we can only call them terrorists.
 
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i dont know much about this incident , all i can do is rely on you guys sitting there back home.

all i know is that my head is spinning ...
 
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i dont know much about this incident , all i can do is rely on you guys sitting there back home.

all i know is that my head is spinning ...

Brother I was there the whole night just came back home a while ago, i'm speechless.
I don't know what to say, people who die are Pakistanis and people who kill are also Pakistanis. We are burning our own house.
 
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Yes whoever these people where, we can only call them terrorists.

I cant understand one thing .

1 : Some A$*HoL3 exploded a bomb( we called em terrorist )
2: Later on People started burning shops and cars and ambulances , started fighting with those who are there to protect them !!!:hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:

what is the difference between those exploding a bomb and those who are burning their "own" infrastructure.!!

who is the real enemy ? 1st or the 2nd or they are all part of the same nature of Vandalism ...:angry::angry:
 
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I cant understand one thing .

1 : Some A$*HoL3 exploded a bomb( we called em terrorist )
2: Later on People started burning shops and cars and ambulances , started fighting with those who are there to protect them !!!:hitwall::hitwall::hitwall:

what is the difference between those exploding a bomb and those who are burning their "own" infrastructure.!!

who is the real enemy ? 1st or the 2nd or they are all part of the same nature of Vandalism ...:angry::angry:

We only have ourselves to blame. The youth in other countries don't sit at home in the comfort of their houses and express their feelings over the internet, they go out and work together for a change.
 
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We only have ourselves to blame. The youth in other countries don't sit at home in the comfort of their houses and express their feelings over the internet, they go out and work together for a change.

You has to play a pivotal role in this scenario , they need encouragement and guidance from their seniors .

I Hope for a great future and i know what it would take to be one of the greatest Nations :pakistan:
 
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When Saddam's regime collapsed and the Iraqi's went on rampage looting everything from Saddam's Palaces to the local medical facilities, one could understand them attacking the Palaces but you wondered by looting hospitals, they would only suffer themselves.
After what happened in Karachi yesterday, no doubt my fellow country folks are none better than those elsewhere.
What a shame. !!!
 
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Death toll rises to 40 as Karachiites survey blast damage


KARACHI: Shop owners surveyed gutted premises and security forces patrolled nearly empty streets in Karachi on Tuesday, a day after a suicide bomber killed 40 people and triggered a city-centre riot.

The bombing of a Shia procession in Karachi underscored multiple security challenges facing Pakistan at a volatile time for embattled President Asif Ali Zardari.


The government launched a security crackdown last October against al-Qaeda-linked Taliban militants in their tribal strongholds in northwest Pakistan and retaliatory bombings since have killed hundreds of people across Pakistan.

Karachi Mayor Syed Mustafa Kamal told Reuters the death toll had risen to at least 32, with dozens of injured still in hospitals.

“We have arrested some people and are investigating,” Karachi police chief Waseem Ahmed told Reuters.

“According to our initial investigation, the suicide bomber was aged between

18 and 20, and he used 8-9 kilograms of explosives.”

He said at least 500 shops and nine buildings had been set ablaze in the aftermath of the attack.

The attack may have just been part of a series of bombings designed to spread panic or an attempt to ignite sectarian violence to pile more pressure on security forces.

“It is clear that the terrorists are very well organised. They want to destabilise the country,” said Anjum Naqvi, who was part of the bombed procession.



Transport idle, shops closed

The provincial government of Sindh, of which Karachi is the capital, declared a public holiday, though banks and the stock market remained open. Public transport was out of service and most shops and petrol pumps were shut after religious and political parties called for a day of mourning

“Our office and the whole building is completely burnt. Everything has been destroyed,” said Saleem Khan, who runs a car rental business along what is normally a busy road.

A spokesman for the paramilitary rangers, Major Aurangzeb, said his forces were “on 100 per cent deployment and will take every possible step to maintain peace”.

Some grieved before attending funerals, which can be risky — militants have bombed funerals for their victims, usually in the northwest. Others said their lives had been shattered.


“I know it's a huge loss for the families of those who were killed. But what about our families? We are alive and have lost everything,” said Muhammad Shams, owner a shop which makes plastic.

A teeming city of 18 million, Karachi has a long history of ethnic and factional violence, although it has been spared the brunt of Taliban attacks over the past couple of years.


Investors have factored in the violence. But sustained troubles could hurt financial markets in an economy in virtual recession. The stock market opened over one per cent lower.


In Monday's bloodshed, the assailant blew himself up at a march by thousands of people marking the climax of Ashura, the Shia calendar's biggest event, despite heavy security.

The attack was the third in as many days in Karachi.


“Karachi is the heart of the country and any incident here does have a negative impact on investor sentiment,” said Mohammed Sohail, chief executive of brokerage Topline Securities.

Aside from al-Qaeda linked militants bent on toppling his government, the president is also under political pressure.


Some of Zardari's closest aides and thousands of members of his party could face renewed corruption charges which could weaken him further at a time when the United States is pushing his government for tougher action against militants.

DAWN.COM | Metropolitan | Death toll rises to 40 as Karachiites survey blast damage
 
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The return of Yazid

After enjoying a little more than two years of relative peace, Karachi was rudely dragged back on the mutilated map of terror today. A single suicide bomber managed to slip his dynamite strapped body inside a large procession of Shia mourners on Karachi’s M A Jinnah Road and blow himself up, killing and injuring dozens of innocent people, including some security men who were patrolling the fringes of the procession.



The attack has come as a rude shock to the citizens of Karachi and the Sindh province who had been witnessing horrific scenes of similar carnage perpetrated by extremists in the mosques and markets of Punjab and NWFP, and had, for the last couple of years, been somewhat spared from the madness that the terrorists have been displaying in the country, especially ever since 2003. Although the Taliban have yet to claim responsibility for the attack – and given Karachi's history, the attacker may well hail from one of the banned sectarian outfits that have long been established in the city – many believe that there is no longer any point in making distinctions between different extremist groups. Citizens, meanwhile, are concerned that this attack marks the beginning of a wave of violence as witnessed in other parts of the country.



Karachi’s and Sindh’s case in this respect is a tad different where the government is being run by three of Pakistan’s leading ‘secular’ and openly anti-Taliban parties, the PPP, the MQM and the ANP.



Even though these three parties are also allies in the centre, the dynamics of this alliance in Sindh have been a lot more effective in building a consensus against the Taliban, something the federal government and the parliamentarian opposition parties have taken a lot more time and effort to do.



Karachi’s vastly diverse ethnic and sectarian make-up, and the Sufi shrine culture that dominates the rest of Sindh’s social polity have largely managed to repulse forces which, ever since General Ziaul Haq's dictatorship in the 1980s, have been trying to violently impose their brand of Islam in the country. There is however, still some disagreement between the allied parties as to what exactly constitutes ‘Talibanisation,’ especially in Karachi’s case.



So far, only the MQM has directly accused the Taliban for every major terrorist attack that has taken place in the country in the last five years, whereas their allied secular contemporaries, the PPP and the ANP, have largely been vague in their denunciations, usually coupling their condemnation of the Taliban with the now worn-out mantra of a ‘foreign hand.’



But with the unprecedented rise in terrorist attacks in the Frontier province, and with most of these attacks claimed by the Tehrik-e-Taliban-Pakistan (TTP), the ANP too has started to come down hard on directly blaming the Taliban.



And in spite of the fact that only a year ago both the PPP and the ANP in Sindh were downplaying MQM’s warnings of ‘Talibanisation’ taking place in Karachi, today right after the suicide attack in the city, senior ANP leader, Senator Haji Adeel, echoed MQM chief Altaf Hussain’s direct condemnation of the Taliban, also agreeing with Mr Hussain’s plea to boycott those political parties and personalities who are believed to be supporting the Taliban and their intransigent mentality.



To an outsider, and in fact, to many Karachittes as well, the whole idea of certain mainstream political parties and personnel actually mouthing both direct and indirect support for the Taliban is an intriguing phenomenon – especially in these hours of utter carnage and inhumanity being exhibited by the militant sections of extremist thought in the country.



Even though Gallup and other opinion polls on the issue of terrorism and the Taliban in Pakistan have shown a steady decline in support among Pakistanis for terrorist outfits such as the Taliban and the Al Qaeda, the bulk of this disapproval for terrorist organisations has come from Karachiites.



Meanwhile, it seems the people of the Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous and influential province, have somewhat struggled a bit to come out directly against the Taliban, despite, recently, the province being a constant target of Taliban suicide and bomb attacks. What’s more, this curious ambiguity regarding the Taliban found in the province is also reflected by the province’s government being led by Pakistan’s second largest political party, the PML-N.



The PML-N has been rather indistinct and dispassionate about directly confronting or condemning the Taliban who have proudly taken the ownership of a number of suicide attacks in the mosques and markets of the province.



Some analysts believe that the PML-N being (an albeit moderate) right-wing party many of whose supporters come from the religiously conservative petty-bourgeois sections of the Punjab, is still not quite sure exactly where the sympathies of this constituency lie regarding the Taliban.



It is true that ever since the Ziaul Haq dictatorship, Punjab’s urban petty-bourgeoisie played an important economic and supportive role in helping the reactionary general keep much of the Punjab on the side of his so-called ‘Islamisation’ policies. But with the way the Taliban have struck at the economic and social heart of the province, it can be deducted that much of the indirect support a number of extremist organisations were getting from Punjab’s petty-bourgeoisie, has started to erode.



Condemning the Karachi attack, MQM chief Altaf Hussain, whose party has been triumphing in the electoral politics of the city ever since 1988, called the perpetrators of the devastating attack as ‘Yazids’ and once again advised Karachiites to boycott those parties whom he believes are sympathising with the Taliban cause. As mentioned above, ANP too has now criticised these parties, accusing them of encouraging the Talibans’ barbaric ways and agenda.



But who are these parties?



MQM has been highly critical of mainstream right-wing parties such as the Jamaat-i-Islami whose leadership has been in the forefront of popularising the notion that the Taliban are actually ‘freedom fighters’ (against ‘US imperialism’ in the region), and those who are attacking the civilians of Pakistan through bomb and suicide attacks are not Taliban but the ‘paid agents of anti-Islam forces.’



The Jamaat was highly instrumental in helping shape Ziaul Haq’s ‘jihad’ against the Soviet Army in Afghanistan (in the 1980s). It was a jihad built from the billions of dollars worth of aid that the Zia dictatorship received from the US (and Saudi Arabia). There were also reported cases of Jamaat members attacking pro-Soviet student rallies in certain colleges during that war in which to protest against American intervention in Afghanistan, pro-left students were pounced upon by the Jamat’s student-wing, the IJT, for burning the American flag.



However, in the last ten years or so, the Jamat has become one of the loudest exponents of anti-Americanism in Pakistan, even though it has rapidly been losing its electoral influence across Pakistan ever since the mid-1980s, especially in Karachi and Sindh.



ANP too has been castigating the Jamaat for showing ‘double standards,’ with one senior ANP leader, Mian Iftikhar, explaining the Jamaat’s anti-Americanism as something that emerged after the Jamaat lost its central role in Afghanistan (after Zia’s death in 1988), and when American dollars were diverted from jihadi organisations that the Jamaat was patronising, towards the post-Cold War security agencies that are now fighting against Frankenstein monsters such as the Taliban.



Parties such as the PPP, MQM and the ANP who have been exhibiting concern over the issue of certain Pakistani political parties indulging in populist anti-US rhetoric, have found it hard to build a more cohesive consensus, especially in the Punjab, for the Pakistan Army’s war against the Taliban.



It is interesting to note, that though parties such as the Jamat-i-Islami and Imran Khan’s Tehrik-e-Insaaf have largely been ineffectual players in the bigger game of electoral politics, they have however managed to take their stance of the war and the Taliban on the mainstream platform through the electronic media.



Thus, the mainstream electronic media too has come under fire from the allied ruling parties for constantly giving vent to the ‘pro-Taliban’ and populist sentiments of unelected politicians and certain conservative journalists and columnists who - even after dozens of suicide attacks owned up by the Taliban recently - have continued to point the finger towards the US and India.



Even the large amount of proof now available to point towards the direct involvement of the local Taliban in the terrorist attacks in Pakistan it seems has not been able to make these politicians, and electronic and print journalists, change their populist and largely demagogic stand on the issue.



The Pakistan Army is locked in a deadly battle with the Taliban in the north-west of the country. But what makes the return of extremist terrorism significant in Karachi is the fact that it is in this bustling, dynamic and diverse metropolis that the social and cultural battle against fanatic thought in the country is likely to be fought.



It can be said that it is the vast ethnic and sectarian diversity of Karachi associated with the economics, sociology and politics of the city that has kept Karachi significantly more moderate and secular in outlook than the rest of the country, despite of the many puritanical madressas here that were constructed here by the Ziaul Haq dictatorship with Saudi help to recruit and indoctrinate young Pakistanis for the so-called anti-Soviet Afghan jihad.



Though it can also be suggested Karachi’s social polity has so far won the social and cultural battle against extremist thought, there is however every likelihood that if the Taliban and their clandestine sectarian partners now decide to make Karachi their next main target, the city’s response will be somewhat different than what it has been elsewhere in the country.



Karachi has had a volatile history of street battles and of living through near-civil-war conditions (between 1986 and 1999). All the major political parties in the city are heavily armed. But the difference this time is that the PPP, ANP and MQM who have all been involved in street battles fought with sophisticated arms in the past, have in the last two years exhibited a commendable show of co-ordination and mutual empathy in the face of the Taliban threat in the city.



If the going gets worse in Karachi as far as extremist attacks are concerned, this may as well see all three parties willing to pick up arms to fight a common enemy that is now seen hell-bent on destroying the economic and political interests of these parties’ respective constituencies in the city. These constituencies are the most vital pieces of economic and political real state for political parties operating in an economic hub like Karachi.

DAWN.COM | Pakistan | The return of Yazid
 
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But people still not aware with these yazedi taliban and al qaeda who are destroying the Global Peace.
 
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But people still not aware with these yazedi taliban and al qaeda who are destroying the Global Peace.

Global peace can not be restored by cursing some person or group , better we should maintain unity in muslims ummah and strengthen our power of defence and offence against enemies of Islam and peace .

Dawah is only solution to keep society clean from sirk ,bidat , khrafat,kufar ,Zulam and jahalat and implement shariah .

Are we ready to start dawah in our home ,society and country for peace and stability from today ?
 
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its bad but i have to say its seems that similar conditions like that of Irak is in progress ... if we go back a few years this is exactly how it all started in Irak .. and they had similar situation like that of Pakistan .. only difference was US and NATO forces were physically present and in Pakistan they are not.

Unless Pakistanis change their attitude work towards Pakistan , we get out from drawing / bed rooms and counter this criminal imported and imposed religious idealogies not much change is likely to happen , its unfortunate but the way its going the worst is still to come!!
 
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