Suicide blast kills 30 in Pak market

A suicide car bomb ripped through a packed shopping street in Pakistan's northwest town of Charsadda yesterday, killing at least 30 people and wounding around 55, officials said.
The suicide bomber detonated a vehicle in the heart of the small market town, on a road lined with juice shops and women's clothing stores, the third bomb attack in three consecutive days in northwest Pakistan, police said.
"We have received 18 dead bodies, three of them are children, more than 25 were injured," Doctor Zulfiqar Ahmad told AFP by telephone from the main hospital in the town, just outside the main northwestern city of Peshawar.
"We have declared an emergency in the hospital," he added. Other casualties were taken to Peshawar, where the main Lady Reading Hospital received at least five wounded victims in the immediate aftermath of the late afternoon attack.
Charsadda district police chief Mohammad Riaz Khan told Geo television: "This is a busy area. It is usually crowded in the evening time. It took place in the main bazaar. There was no security lapse. I had just crossed this area one minute before the blast," he added.
"Certainly, it was a suicide car explosion," Khan said.
It was the third suicide bombing in three days in the northwest, which lies on the edge of the tribal badlands infested with al-Qaeda and Taliban-linked militants where Pakistan is pressing a major offensive into a fourth week.
On Monday, a suicide bomber killed three people in Peshawar after stepping out of a rickshaw and detonating his explosives at a police checkpoint on the outer ring road of the metropolis.
Nuclear-armed Pakistan, which has suffered a wave of Islamist bombings since July 2007, has been rocked by a spike in bloodshed killing more than 350 people since early October and forcing troops onto the offensive in the tribal area.
On Sunday, a suicide bomber killed 15 people in a crowded cattle market in Peshawar, where devout Muslims were already making preparations to buy meat for the Eid-ul-Azha festival later this month.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for that attack, saying it was in retaliation for efforts by Mayor Abdul Malik, who was killed, to raise a militia to fight Islamist rebels.
The United States has put Pakistan on the frontline of its war against al-Qaeda, increasingly disturbed by deteriorating security in the country where suicide attacks and bombings have killed more than 2,450 people in 28 months.
The government blames most of the attacks on Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which has vowed to avenge an offensive against its strongholds and the killing of their leader Baitullah Mehsud in a US missile attack in August.
The military says around 486 militants and 46 soldiers have been killed since the offensive began, but security officials and analysts say that many Islamist rebels have simply fled rather than staying to fight.

Comments

‘বেকার, জনতা, নাগরিক’

নির্বাচন কর্মকর্তারা জানান, এ বছরের তালিকায় এমন সব নাম রয়েছে যেগুলো বেশ অদ্ভুত এবং অনেকগুলো দলের নাম ব্যাখ্যা করা কঠিন।

২ ঘণ্টা আগে