Pakistan : 20+ killed in Sunni mosque twin blasts

rock127

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Pakistan : 20+ killed in Sunni mosque twin blasts

PESHAWAR (Dunya News/Agencies) - Bombs exploded outside two mosques in a village in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, killing at least 20 people.The blasts at the two Sunni Muslim mosques also wounded 45 people, said tribal police officer Badshah Rehman.

Both of the mosques were badly damaged, and the roof of one of them collapsed. The mosques were located in Baz Darrah village in the Malakand district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, Rehman said.Shahid Ali, who was in the first mosque that was attacked, said the explosion came just as worshippers were starting Friday prayers.

"I rushed out with others and saw several people bleeding and crying," Ali told The Associated Press by telephone."There was dust and smoke around."Ali rushed to the second mosque after it was attacked and saw that its roof had caved in and it was on fire."Many people are buried under the rubble," he said.

Rescue workers were trying to retrieve the dead and wounded from the debris, Rehman said.No one has claimed responsibility for the blasts, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban.
 

ladder

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The silence in bomb blasts after the election day made me think that TTP / religious groups would wait for a few days and give a chance to new govt. to show its seriousness towards talk and ceasefire.

But I think, I made a fundamental mistake in thinking so, as fundamentally it was still "PAKISTAN".
 

rock127

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Peace and Ceasefire by Talibunnies?? These are terrorist orgs which simply wants Sharia Law implemented.
 

MAYURA

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Peace and Ceasefire by Talibunnies?? These are terrorist orgs which simply wants Sharia Law implemented.
guy, they too are intelligent and as laid down by imam ghazzali, they know where and when to retreat and attack.
 

ladder

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rock127

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But recently they sent in fillers to the Sharif govt. about it.

Taliban's ceasefire offer

http://http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2013-05-16/news/39310570_1_new-government-dialogue-offer-pml-n

And I thought they will somewhat tone down the bombings till govt. responds
That ceasfire is just because they are also tired a bit blowing themselves.Few years back they FORCED Pakis to accept "peace deals" where talibunnies forced Sharia law.This is when US came again and FORCED Pakis to fight back.
 

ladder

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That ceasfire is just because they are also tired a bit blowing themselves
I also thought the same.But this incident proves that they are not.Boom-Boom will continue:thumb:
 

sorcerer

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Sharif must strike against ISI fast and hard
The moment Nawaz Sharif becomes the Prime Minister of Pakistan, the clock will begin ticking against him. There is nothing surprising in this. In all democracies, the highest point in the political life of a prime minister is on the day he takes office. Thereafter, it is downhill till the next election.

Now, if Sharif is conscious of this, the one thing he should do on day one is to issue an order placing the Inter Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI) under civilian leadership. In one full swoop, this will de-fang the Army of the most potent instrument it uses to distort Pakistani democracy. Every day that he delays taking action against the ISI, will be a delay that will cost him much more when the confrontation with the Army takes place, as it inevitably will, down the line.

This is a no brainer. In July 2008, Pakistan People's Party prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani issued a notification placing the ISI under the control of the Interior Ministry headed by Rehman Malik, but within hours the Army and the then president, Pervez Musharraf, forced him to withdraw the notification. That had a lot to do with the fact that Gilani was a light weight and that the PPP had waited several months till after the general elections that swept them into power, to act.

Nawaz Sharif has come to power with a much stronger showing and he has the clout within the Punjabi establishment to put the army in its place. More than that, he has reasons to distrust the Army which overthrew his government in 1999 and sought to hang him for treason. Sharif has shown an inclination to take on the men in khaki. In October 1998, he sacked General Jehangir Karamat from his position as the Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee and the Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistan Army. It is another matter that he made the disastrous choice of replacing him with Pervez Musharraf. This time around, Sharif is on record declaring that he will go by seniority when it comes to appointing a new chief in succession to Ashfaq Pervez Kayani who retires at the end of July this year, having enjoyed a three-year extension of service.


But the ISI is quite another thing. Last November, the Pakistan Supreme Court ruled in the Asghar Khan case that former ISI chief Lt General Asad Durrani and Army chief Mirza Aslam Beg had collected Rs 140 million to rig the elections against Benazir Bhutto and the PPP in 1990. Ironically, one of the recipients was Nawaz Sharif who was at that time seen as a creation of the Army to offset the political allure of Benazir. But while politicians got half the money, the ISI and the Army kept the balance for their own use.

This is just the tip of the iceberg of the ISI's malign activities within Pakistan which includes all manner of skullduggery, including the intimidation of journalists and other democratic elements. No democracy, such as one Pakistan aspires to be, should permit an intelligence agency to be run the way the ISI is. While all countries need intelligence services, they also need to be under the control of the government of the day, not its army.

Even as an external intelligence agency, the ISI has been a law unto itself. The attacks on the Indian Embassy in Kabul in 2008 and 2009 are instances of action which went against Pakistan's own foreign policy. As for the Mumbai attack of November 2008, there are clear indications that some elements of the ISI were involved in what was clearly an act of international terrorism. All this may still happen in an intelligence agency controlled by the civilian government, but at least the accountability for its actions will be transparent.

Nawaz Sharif has a huge agenda before him. Pakistan is being torn from within by Sunni extremists like the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan. Groups like the Lashkar-e-Tayyeba are involved in terrorist operations in India and Afghanistan, if not other countries. And the Haqqani network facilitates the activities of these groups, as well of the Afghan Taliban from Pakistani territory in North Waziristan. Any new government in Pakistan must establish its complete authority in its boundaries. But here, again, the government comes up against the activities of the ISI which use groups like the LeT and the Haqqani network to further its policies.

Then, there is the need for Sharif to right the listing Pakistani economy. He is aware that in great measure the support he got was because the people were fed up of the misgovernance of the PPP government.

However, first things must come first. And that is to establish the writ of the Pakistani government over all the segments of Pakistani society and its sovereign territory. To this end, the biggest obstacle it confronts is the ISI and the Army who feel that they represent the idea of Pakistan better than any group of elected officials. Sharif must act, because it is his survival which will eventually be at stake.

(The writer is a Distinguished Fellow at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi)

Courtesy : The Mid Day, Mumbai
Indian Strategic Studies: Sharif must strike against ISI fast and hard

Nawaz is gonna sweat a loooot
 

JBH22

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so who's to blamed this time Raw or Mossad
 

Singh

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It could be a Barelvi Sunni Mosque, or it could be frequented by pro-Govt Lashkar members.
 

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