Suicide attack kills 4 in NW Pakistan

Agence France-Presse

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Suicide attack kills 4 in NW Pakistan

AFP

An official says the attack was in revenge for the continuing military offensive in North Waziristan tribal agency against insurgents

PESHAWAR, Pakistan – A car bomb suicide attack targeting a senior military officer rocked Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar Tuesday, September 23, killing at least four people and wounding 24 others, officials said.

Broken glass and human remains littered the scene of the explosion near the city’s main railway station, where one SUV was blown to pieces while the wreck of another smoldered.

“It was a vehicle-borne suicide attack which killed 3 people including an FC (Frontier Constabulary) soldier,” senior local police official Najib-ur-Rehman told Agence France-Presse, adding the two others were civilians including a woman.

A senior security official later told Agence France-Presse a fourth person had died.

Fourteen injured people were being treated at the city’s Lady Reading Hospital and 10 others at the Combined Military Hospital, officials said.

Senior police official Faisal Shahzad said the target of the bombing appeared to be Brigadier Khalid Javed, the second most senior officer in the FC force, who escaped unhurt.

Najib said the attack was in revenge for the continuing military offensive in North Waziristan tribal agency against insurgents.

Muhammad Rizwan, a government employee who was passing on a motorbike when the blast occurred, told Agence France-Presse from his hospital bed it was an deafening explosion.

“I fell from my motorbike after the blast and regained consciousness in the hospital,” said Rizwan, who sustained head and shoulder injuries.

Peshawar is the gateway to the seven semi-autonomous tribal regions where the military has been battling Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants.

The military began a long-awaited push to clear militant bases from North Waziristan in June after a bloody attack on Karachi airport finally sank faltering peace talks with the rebels.

Air strikes, artillery, mortars and ground troops have all been used to retake territory there.

The tribal areas have for years been a hideout for Islamist militants of all stripes – including Al-Qaeda and the homegrown Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan as well as foreign fighters such as Uzbeks and Uighurs.

Pakistan’s army says it has killed more than a thousand militants and lost 86 soldiers since the start of the current operation. – Rappler.com

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