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'Many killed' in Pakistan bombing

Blast kills 25, northwest Pakistan

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) -- A hotel blast in Pakistan's northwestern city of Peshawar on Tuesday left 25 people dead and 30 injured, police said.

A suicide bomb ripped through a crowded hotel restaurant in northwestern Pakistan Tuesday, days after a close relative of slain Taliban military commander Mullah Dadullah was nabbed there, security officials said.

The bomb went off in the ground-floor restaurant of the four-story Marhaba Hotel in an old quarter of Peshawar, a city near the Afghan border, leaving a carnage of corpses and body parts scattered among broken tables and shattered crockery.

Investigators found a message taped to one leg of the bomber, saying that spies for America would meet the fate of those killed in the blast, provincial police chief Sharif Virk said. The message also included the Persian word "Khurasan" -- often used in militant videos to describe Afghanistan.


Two security officials told The Associated Press that a close relative of Dadullah had been arrested in the restaurant a few days before Tuesday's attack. The officials, who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter, refused to be identified.

They declined to say whether the arrest of the relative had helped the U.S. military kill Dadullah in an operation in southern Afghanistan over the weekend -- one of the most senior militant leaders to die since the ouster of the Taliban regime in late 2001 for hosting al-Qaeda.

Earlier, Javed Iqbal Cheema, a top Pakistani counterterrorism official, told a news conference he did not think the bombing was linked to Dadullah, and denied that Pakistan had provided any intelligence that led to his killing.

"I would only say that Dadullah was killed in Afghanistan and Pakistan did not provide any intelligence on Dadullah," he said in Islamabad.

However, a senior investigator said police were examining whether Tuesday's attack could be linked to events in Pakistan's volatile tribal regions or Afghanistan, including Dadullah's demise.

Hassan Khan, a waiter in the restaurant said the bomb went off soon after the Afghan owner of the restaurant, Saddar Uddin, had returned from a trip outside with some relatives. Uddin, his two sons and two other relatives as well as seven employees were among the dead, he said.

A local intelligence official said Uddin, an ethnic Uzbek, had links to the party of anti-Taliban warlord Abdul Rashid Dostum, part of the Northern Alliance that helped the U.S. topple the Islamist regime.

Police initially said the victims of the blast were Pakistanis. But the intelligence official said the hotel was also popular with Afghans and that it had been crowded with people eating lunch. The official and the investigator asked that he not be named for security reasons.

Cheema said that 25 people were killed and 30 wounded in the bombing. Saeed Khan, a police officer, said the dead included two women and a 5-year-old boy who were having lunch.

The waiter, Hassan Khan, said he only survived the blast because he was delivering food to guests in their rooms when the bomb went off in the restaurant below.

"I lost my senses, and when I came round and ran to see, there were dead bodies and body parts everywhere, even out in the street," said Khan, whose clothes were stained with blood and soot.

Television footage showed the bloodied bodies of victims on stretchers being bundled into waiting ambulances and then carried chaotically through the crowded corridors of nearby hospitals.

Windows of the hotel front were shattered and fans hanging from the roof were twisted. Windows were also shattered in nearby buildings.

Police said they had evacuated the hotel, which lies in a busy market area, cordoned off the scene and opened an investigation.

Peshawar, the capital of North West Frontier Province, has suffered periodic bomb attacks in recent years.

In January, a suicide bombing near a Shiite mosque killed 15 people and wounded more than 30, mostly police.

On April 28, a suicide attack on Pakistan's Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao in the nearby town of Charsadda killed 28 people. Sherpao was slightly hurt in the blast, the latest in a series of top Pakistani officials to be targeted by militants.

Islamic militants have increasingly asserted themselves in Pakistan's frontier regions, where scores of people have been executed over the past several years apparently for being too closely aligned with the Pakistani government or America -- allies in the U.S.-led war on terrorism.

Tuesday's blast will add to a sense of growing instability in Pakistan after a weekend of violence in the southern city of Karachi that left 41 dead. That unrest was linked a political crisis sparked by President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's suspension of the country's top judge.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/05/1...t.ap/index.html
 
25 is too small a figure to send a shiver down pakistan's spine.
 
25 is too small a figure to send a shiver down pakistan's spine.

Exactly, we've seen worse but such events are usually a writing on the wall and I'm affraid we're losing hold on Peshawar and the rest of the Province.
This is already the third major terrorist attack in the city. :angry:
 
Islamabad, May 16, 2007

Pakistan suicide bomber leaves warning to US spies

A suicide bomber who killed 25 people in an attack on a crowded hotel in Pakistan left a grisly warning taped to his leg: "Those who spy for Americans will meet the same fate."

"The message in Pashto language appeared to be written with a black marker," Malik Zafar Azam, law minister in Pakistan's volatile North West Frontier Province (NWFP), told media on Wednesday.

Azam said he was the first government official to reach the Marhaba hotel in the centre of Peshawar after Tuesday's blast -- which also wounded 32 people and saw the severed legs of the bomber himself.

Police said the warning was taped to the man's leg.

"The suicide bomber was an old man. We are carrying out forensic and related tests," a senior police investigator said.

The blast left no crater, and aside from the tell-tale way in which the bomber's body had blown apart, police also found nuts and bolts, sometimes packed into suicide bomb vests to make the explosion more deadly.

The hotel was owned and frequented by Afghans.

Government officials have dampened speculation the suicide attack could have been retaliation against collaborators after US-led forces killed Mullah Dadullah, the Taliban's top military commander in southern Afghanistan, on Saturday.

Hundreds of thousands of Afghans live in Peshawar and the surrounding area, and the city has been a staging post for Jihadi groups sympathetic to Al -Qaeda.

To escape the conflict raging in their homeland in the past three decades, many Afghans flocked through the Khyber Pass to Peshawar, Afghanistan's winter capital in a bygone era.

In recent years, Peshawar has suffered an overspill of violence from tribal regions on the border with Afghanistan. The Pakistan military has been fighting Al Qaeda militants there, while seeking to contain pro-Taliban tribesmen.

A rash of bomb blasts has hit the city and areas nearby since late last year, as militants angry with President Pervez Musharraf's alliance with the United States sought to destabilise the government by creating insecurity.

A little over two weeks ago, another suicide bomber killed 26 people in an attack that appeared to target the country's interior minister while he was visiting Charsadda, a town 20 km (12 miles) northeast of Peshawar.

"It is too early to say who was behind the latest attack, but the pattern was similar to one on the interior minister and previous attacks," the investigator said.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Story...&&Headline=Pakistan+bomber+warns+US+spies+too
 
Al-Qaeda strikes at anti-Taliban spies
By Syed Saleem Shahzad

KARACHI - There was no doubt in the Pakistani intelligence community when Taliban commander Mullah Dadullah was killed in Afghanistan last weekend by US-led forces that retaliatory action would be taken against anti-Taliban collaborators.

They did not have to wait long. On Tuesday, a suicide bomber reportedly carrying a warning for "spies for America" blew up patrons of a hotel in the northern city of Peshawar, near the
Afghan border, killing at least 25 people.

The choice of the Marhaba Hotel was significant. It was owned by an Uzbek named Sadaruddin, a close relative of anti-Taliban leader General Abdul Rasheed Dostum.

Initial media reports said that shortly before Dadullah's death, one of his sons had been arrested at the hotel by police accompanied by an official of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) after being fingered by the owner.

However, Asia Times Online has learned that the security forces deny any such arrest. Instead, they hint that an important lead was discovered at the hotel, "but it was not his [Dadullah's] son". Days later, Dadullah died in a firefight with US and Afghan troops in a remote part of Helmand province.

The owner of the hotel and several of his sons died along with the mostly Afghan citizens in Tuesday's attack. A message was found taped to the severed leg of the bomber that all spies for the US would meet the same fate as those killed.

Information obtained by Asia Times Online indicates that the suicide bomber was briefed and dispatched from a camp in Afghanistan by al-Qaeda's best trainer, Abu Laith al-Libby. Libby is obsessed with rooting out US spies from within the ranks of Pakistan's law-enforcement agencies.

Libby is a hardened fighter of Libyan origin who has trained Afghans in the operation of missiles and rockets. He has previously operated in Afghanistan, but the death of Dadullah has turned his attention to the Pakistan-based US proxy network of informers.

After September 11, 2001, when Pakistan signed on for the US-led "war on terror", many anti-Taliban officials were recruited and remain active in passing on information for monetary reward, and even trips to the United States as guests of the State Department.

Immediately after the blast in Peshawar, a red alert was declared in the already violence-hit southern port city of Karachi, which has been the epicenter of anti-al-Qaeda operations in the past. Several police officials are known to have coordinated, unofficially, with FBI cells.

Most of the al-Qaeda members arrested over the past six years have been taken in Karachi, and mostly after information was received from within the ranks of the police. These officials act independently of the government.

The trend was common across the country and at one stage the government put its foot down. Police officials were warned that if any of them went on the US State Department program without prior permission, strict disciplinary action would be taken.

Nevertheless, elements in the police and their proxy networks are still the main source of information in the "war on terror" campaign in Pakistan, and the next showdown is likely to be between these networks and al-Qaeda.
 
What's with all these people spreading violence in PAkistan, they should go to their own countries and blow people up there. First they come here illegally and then they do kill the people there, sad thing is that some of our own people support them. Are they really our own people? or just infected?
 
Who is to be blamed? Blaming is sometime beneficial for the society.

Blame the bugtis, indians, and Al-Qaeda and with that support the do things interests of the country.

Its pretty stupid to kill the civilians. You get nothing out of it.

Negotiations with the terrorist is impossible. A policy which should always remain.
 
Its pretty stupid to kill the civilians. You get nothing out of it.

Negotiations with the terrorist is impossible. A policy which should always remain.

And when indians do that, you call them oppressors
 
So What ,the freedom fighters killed some opressors.Does it hurts anybody?
 
So What ,the freedom fighters killed some opressors.Does it hurts anybody?

And when indians do that, you call them oppressors

They're from Afghanistan fighting for freedom of Afghanistan and they come and bomb a place in Pakistan.

In India, the people that bomb are under Indian occupation.

There is a clear distinction between the two.
 
They're from Afghanistan fighting for freedom of Afghanistan and they come and bomb a place in Pakistan.

In India, the people that bomb are under Indian occupation.

There is a clear distinction between the two.

FYI Balochi's are asking for a differnet country. Aerial Bombing of your own countrymen killing 80. You call that distinction, NWFP uneasy peace accord with the tribals, They are in control over there, Pakistan never has been in such uneasy spot in its history.
 
FYI Balochi's are asking for a differnet country. Aerial Bombing of your own countrymen killing 80. You call that distinction, NWFP uneasy peace accord with the tribals, They are in control over there, Pakistan never has been in such uneasy spot in its history.

Err Balochi's asking for their own country? Are you indian media's crack? You sure are. There are some odd morons who want that, the vast majority don't. And the aerial bombing on those 80 people were not our own countrymen all right. You don't call terrorists our countrymen.
 
They're from Afghanistan fighting for freedom of Afghanistan and they come and bomb a place in Pakistan.

In India, the people that bomb are under Indian occupation.

There is a clear distinction between the two.

Who defines they are "under" Indian occupation? Pakistan.
Other then Pakistan no other country defines anyone in India as under "Indian Occupation".

So people fighting for freedom in Afghanistan can come and bomb Pakistan as they like?So is this the reason that Americans bomb Pakistani civilians as well.. well interesting .I never knew that.
And you say it is okay to bomb people in Pakistan?
 
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