Pak PM escapes assassination bid
Snipers fired on the motorcade for Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani yesterday as it drove to the airport to pick up the prime minister, striking his car window at least twice, officials said.
Neither the prime minister nor his staff were in the vehicles, but the assassination attempt comes as Pakistan's new civilian government--under pressure from American officials--is cracking down on Islamist militants after ousting Pervez Musharraf from the presidency.
At least two bullets hit the front window on the driver's side of Gilani's limousine on the main highway linking Islamabad with the nearby city of Rawalpindi, officials said.
Zahid Bashir, the premier's press secretary, said unknown assailants fired "multiple sniper shots" in what he described as a "murder attempt."
Interior Secretary Kamal Shah said later, however, that the vehicles were attacked on their way to the airport to pick up the prime minister, who had been in Lahore, and that Gilani's plane had not even landed yet.
"The driver reached Islamabad airport, but the prime minister or his staff was not traveling in the vehicles," Shah said.
Television footage showed Gilani's black Mercedes parked at his office in the capital with two impact points clearly visible on the driver's window. The glass was cracked but intact.
Information Minister Sherry Rehman also confirmed that Gilani was not in the motorcade at the time and was safely back in Islamabad.
The attack was the second apparent assassination attempt in Pakistan in quick succession.
Shots were fired last week at a car carrying Lynne Tracy, the top US diplomat in Pakistan's troubled northwest, as she was headed to her office in the city of Peshawar. No one was hurt in that shooting.
Plainclothes police with a dog searched for clues on a small hill yesterday afternoon, from which they believed the shots were fired at the premier's car. They gathered snack wrappers and juice cartons and took them away from beneath a huge portrait of Pakistan's founding father, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, which greets travelers arriving in the capital.
The road was temporarily blocked, with traffic jammed in both directions.
Four workers for a company that is involved in a construction project on the road said they heard no shots and were not aware anything had happened until police arrived.
"We were working here, and the police came and questioned us," said Mohammad Zada.
Another worker, Shah Zeb, said he had been making his afternoon prayers when the incident occurred, and when he returned, "Police grabbed me. They searched me."
Pakistani political leaders have repeatedly faced the threat of assassination.
Musharraf, who was despised by militants for allying with Washington after the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, escaped at least four attempts on his life. In December, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto died in a gun-and-bomb attack during an election rally two months after returning from exile.
Interior ministry chief Rehman Malik described the incident as "a cowardly act."
"We will catch whoever has done it," he told reporters in the southern city of Karachi.
"It is not politics, but terrorism, and we condemn it."
Information Minister Sherry Rehman, announcing that an investigation had been launched into the incident, told state television: "Those who had designs, have failed."
Gilani has been prime minister since March after an election win by his Pakistan People's Party (PPP), the party of former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, who was assassinated in Rawalpindi in December.
The attempt to kill Gilani comes amid mounting international concern about the stability of Pakistan, a vital ally in the US-led "war on terror" that is increasingly seen as a safe haven for Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.
Musharraf's resignation and the race to replace him come amid a prolonged battle with Islamic militants who have carried out a series of suicide bombings and clashed with troops on the Afghan border.
Officials declined to speculate on who might have been responsible for shooting at Gilani's motorcade.
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