Pakistan's Descent into Chaos: Terrorist & Drone Attacks

zolpidam

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Blast kills 24 in Shangla

Monday, 12 Oct, 2009


The explosion is the latest in a string of attacks in the country, signalling the DAWN.COM | Provinces | Blast kills 24 in Shangla
MINGORA: A suspected suicide bomber killed up to 24 people in Pakistan's Shangla district on Monday, military officials said.

The bomb blew up next to a military vehicle in the district and members of the security forces were among the dead, one of the officials said.

The explosion is the latest in a string of attacks in the country, signalling the Taliban are still strong
 

RPK

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28 killed in Pak suicide attack

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Islamabad, Oct 12 (PTI) At least 28 people were killed and over 40 injured today in a suicide attack in a market in northwest Pakistan's restive Malakand area, the latest in a series of terror strikes that have rocked the country.

? ? ?The suicide attacker blew himself up near a security forces vehicle in the main market at Alpurai in Shangla district, which is part of the Malakand division, witnesses were quoted as saying by TV news channels. The attack occurred near a police station.

? ? ?Police officials put the death toll at 28. More than 40 people were injured in the blast, they said.

? ? ?The army had launched a major operation against the Taliban in Malakand division, which includes the troubled Swat valley, in May. The army claims it has killed over 2,000 militants in the region so far.
 

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AFP: 41 dead as suicide blast hits northwest Pakistan

41 dead as suicide blast hits northwest Pakistan

By Lehaz Ali (AFP) – 7 hours ago

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A devastating suicide bomb hit northwest Pakistan killing 41 people Monday, as the military geared up for an assault on Taliban rebels blamed for increasingly bloody and brazen attacks.

The bomber, reported to be aged about 13, flung himself at a military convoy passing through a busy market in Shangla, a northwest district near Swat where the army claimed to have flushed out Taliban rebels after a fierce offensive.

But Islamist extremist groups appear far from quashed, with an audacious raid on army headquarters over the weekend leaving 23 people dead and underscoring the vulnerability of the nuclear-armed nation. Eight days of bloodshed.

At least 116 people have been killed in a series of devastating blasts and attacks in Pakistan in the last four days.

The Al-Qaeda-linked Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) movement, holed up in the lawless northwest tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, claimed responsibility for the day-long army headquarters hostage drama near Islamabad.

"As long as Pakistan continues its operation against the Taliban, we will also keep continuing such attacks," Taliban spokesman Azam Tariq told AFP.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the Shangla blast, but the suicide bombing bore all the hallmarks of a TTP strike, and hit in a one-time stronghold of fugitive Swat Taliban commander Maulana Fazlullah.

"Forty-one people were killed and 45 were injured in the suicide blast," said Mian Iftekhar Hussain, provincial information minister.

A spokesman from the Swat Media Centre said that six soldiers were among those killed when the young suicide bomber on foot stuck a paramilitary convoy passing through a security checkpost in a crowded bazaar in Alpuri town.

"When he blew himself up, some of the trucks carrying ammunition were also hit and the ammunition exploded, causes more human losses," the spokesman said.

"He was 13 or 14 years old, according to our investigations so far."

The military launched their offensive in and around Swat valley in April after Taliban insurgents bent on imposing a harsh brand of Islamic law advanced to within 100 kilometres (60 miles) of Islamabad.

The army says it is now ready for a full-scale offensive on the Pakistani Taliban seat of power in South Waziristan, a rugged mountainous region bordering Afghanistan which lies outside direct government control.

"It is now a matter of military judgement, what is the appropriate timing (and) in the best national interests," military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told reporters.

On Sunday and Monday, air raids designed to soften up the rebels hit the northwest tribal belt, after Taliban gunmen staged an audacious daytime attack on the military command centre on Saturday.

In total, nine militants, 11 soldiers and three hostages were killed in the crisis that unfolded at the heart of the military establishment in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, which ended with a commando raid Sunday.

"Their target was to take hostage senior officers of the GHQ (General Headquarters) and make demands," Abbas told a press conference.

"The main demand was the release of terrorists including high-profile ones. It included over 100 names."

Taliban spokesman Tariq on Monday claimed that attack, telling an AFP reporter by telephone: "It was carried out by our Punjab branch... We have the capability to strike at any place in Pakistan."

The TTP have also claimed a suicide bomb that killed five UN workers at their offices in Islamabad last Monday, but did not comment on a suicide car bomb Friday that killed 52 people in the northwestern capital Peshawar.

Analysts say that an operation in Waziristan will be a tougher task then flushing militants out of Swat, with the Taliban entrenched in a hostile terrain and able to slip easily across the Afghan frontier.

Officials said that war planes bombed known militant bases late Sunday in South Waziristan's Makeen and Ladha towns and in Bajaur district Monday, with a total of 31 militants killed in the strikes.
 

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The Associated Press: Recent attacks in or linked to Pakistan

Recent attacks in or linked to Pakistan

By The Associated Press (AP) – 1 hour ago

A look at some recent major attacks in Pakistan or blamed on Pakistan-based militants:

_ Oct. 12, 2009: A suicide car bomb explodes near an army vehicle in a market in the northwest Shangla district, killing 41, including six security officers, and wounding 45.

_ Oct. 10, 2009: A raid on army headquarters in the city of Rawalpindi kills nine militants and 14 others.

_ Oct. 9, 2009: A suicide car bomb in the northwestern city of Peshawar kills 53 people.

_ Oct. 5, 2009: A bomber dressed as a security official kills five staffers at the U.N. food agency's headquarters in the capital, Islamabad.

_ Sept. 18, 2009: A suicide car bomb destroys a two-story hotel near the northwestern town of Kohat, killing 30 people in what might have been a sectarian attack by Sunni militants against Shiite Muslims.

_ May 27, 2009: A suicide car bomber targets buildings housing police and intelligence offices in the eastern city of Lahore, killing about 30 and wounding at least 250.

_ March 27, 2009: A suicide bomber demolishes a packed mosque near the northwestern town of Jamrud, killing about 50 people and injuring scores more.

_ March 3, 2009: Gunmen attack the Sri Lankan national cricket team in Lahore, wounding several players and killing six policemen and a driver.

_ Nov. 26-28, 2008: Ten attackers, allegedly from Pakistan, kill 166 people in a three-day assault on luxury hotels, a Jewish center and other sites in Mumbai, India.

_ Sept. 20, 2008: A suicide truck bomb kills at least 54 and wounds more than 250 as it devastates the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad.

_ Aug. 21, 2008: Suicide bombers blow themselves up at two gates of a weapons factory in the town of Wah, killing at least 67 people and wounding at least 100.
 

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13-yr-old Taliban kills 45 in Pakistan!!!

13-yr-old kills 45 in Pakistan

Peshawar, Oct. 13: The Pakistani Taliban on Tuesday claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing carried out by a teenage boy in northwest Shangla district, which killed 45 people at a busy market.

According to officials, a teenager was wearing a suicide vest and threw himself at a military convoy passing through a Alpuri town on Monday, the latest in a wave of attacks that have killed 125 people in Pakistan in eight days, the officials said.
“We claim the responsibility for the Shangla suicide attack. This is revenge for our martyrs,” said Azam Tariq, Taliban spokesman. He added: “This is part of the series of attacks that we are carrying out. Wait and see more.”
The feared Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) group has vowed to avenge the death of their leader Baitullah Mehsud in a US missile strike in the lawless northwest tribal region of South Waziristan on August 5.
The Islamist extremist group has already claimed a weekend raid on Pakistan’s Army headquarters, when gunmen took 42 hostages in a brazen siege ending on Sunday with nine militants, 11 soldiers and three hostages killed.
Insurgents said attacks would continue until military operations against their strongholds came to an end.
Security forces marched into Swat valley — which borders Shangla — in April this year, after Taliban insurgents extended their grip on the area and advanced to with 100 km of Islamabad.
The government and military officials are now claiming success in the operation, and have vowed to take the anti-Taliban offensive into South Waziristan, the seat of the TTP and a rugged area outside direct government control.
Analysts say a spike in attacks — which include a suicide car bomb on Friday killing 52 people in Peshawar city — are being carried out by militants keen to deter any advance into their sanctuaries along the Afghan border.
Pakistan fighter jets on Tuesday bombed the region killing six suspected militants, part of a months-long campaign the military says aims to “soften-up” the area ahead of an offensive by ground troops.

13-yr-old kills 45 in Pak | Deccan Chronicle
 

gokulakannan

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blast kills at least 8 in pakistan

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN) -- At least eight people were killed Thursday morning when a suicide car bomber rammed a police station in northwest Pakistan, authorities said.

The attack took place about 9 a.m. in the Kohat district, which borders Pakistan's tribal region, police official Zafar Iqbal said. At least two victims were police officers.

The offices of several senior police and government officials are next to the police station that was targeted. Several military installations also are nearby, Iqbal said.

Blast kills at least 8 in Pakistan - CNN.com
:thumbs_thmbdn:
 

RPK

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Lahore under siege: Terrorist attack FIA building, Elite Centre

Lahore: Within days of attacking the Pak Army HQ in Rawalpindi, terrorists struck again on Thursday in the eastern city of Lahore. Armed terrorists attacked three areas in the city early morning – Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) building, Elite Force Headquarters, Manawan Training Centre.

Gunmen entered a building housing the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA), a premier law enforcement organisation that deals with matters ranging from immigration to terrorism, at around 9:30 am and took some hostages. However, SSP Operations has claimed that the building is now cleared of militants.


According to Pakistani official, seven people have been killed when a team of gunmen attacked the federal law enforcement building on Temple Road.

Senior official Sajjad Bhutta said that the attack lasted about 1 1/2 hours and was over by 11 am.

He said the dead included two attackers, four government employees and a bystander.

Senior police official Chaudhry Shafiq says one of the dead wore a suicide jacket laden with explosives. One attacker has been reportedly taken into custody from FIA building.

Two bodies were recovered near the gate of the FIA building, SP Civil Lines Haider Ismail told reporters. He said a suicide jacket and grenades were recovered from the spot.

Some Elite Force and Rangers personnel entered the FIA building to eliminate the terrorists.

The FIA office that was attacked this morning is located next to another building of the same agency that was targeted by a suicide car bomber in March last year. In that attack, 24 people were killed and scores injured.

At Elite Force Headquarters

However, firing is still on near Elite Force Headquarters on Bedian Road, about 6 km from the airport. Witnesses said the terrorists lobbed several grenades and then opened fire before entering the centre.

Scores of policemen surrounded the training centre. Officials said a large parade was to be held at the centre today.

At Police Training Centre

Even as the security personnel were taking stock of the situation, another group of ultras stormed the Police Training Centre at Manawan on the outskirts of the city. Unconfirmed reports also claimed that three explosions have been heard at Manawan.

Terrorists had in March this year stormed the police training centre at Manawan, which is located close to the other training facility attacked this morning.

‘Situation under control’

Meanwhile, Pakistan Interior Minister Rehman Malik has confirmed that FIA building is now cleared of the militants, while firing is still on at the other two locations. However, he said the situation was under control.

“It’s a guerrilla war. Our forces are alert and they have given stiff resistance.”

He also informed that Pakistani Rangers have now moved in on Bedian Road to assist the police force.

Today's attack was also part of a new trend of terrorists storming the facilities of security agencies. Last week, a group of terrorists attempted to storm the Pakistan Army's General Headquarters in Rawalpindi. Nine attackers and 14 security personnel and civilian employees of the armed forces died in the assault
 

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Gunmen, bomber hit 4 sites in Pakistan, 31 die
By BABAR DOGAR and MUNIR AHMAD (AP) – 19 minutes ago
LAHORE, Pakistan — Teams of gunmen attacked three security sites Thursday in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore while a suicide bomber hit a northwestern town, killing a total of 31 people. The strikes were part of an escalating a wave of terror aimed at scuttling a planned offensive into the militant heartland on the Afghan border.
One of the attacks, on a commando training facility on Lahore's outskirts, continued into Thursday afternoon as security forces scoured the area for fugitive assailants.
The assaults paralyzed the cultural capital of this nuclear-armed U.S. ally, showing the militants are highly organized and able to carry out sophisticated, coordinated strikes against heavily fortified facilities despite stepped up security across the country.
No group immediately claimed responsibility, though suspicion fell on the Taliban who have claimed other recent strikes. The attacks Thursday also were the latest to underscore the growing threat to Punjab, the province next to India where the Taliban are believed to have made inroads and linked up with local insurgent outfits.
President Asif Ali Zardari said the bloodshed that has engulfed the nation over the past 11 days would not deter the government from its mission to eliminate the violent extremists, according to a statement on the state-run news agency.
"The enemy has started a guerrilla war," Interior Minister Rehman Malik said. "The whole nation should be united against these handful of terrorists, and God willing we will defeat them."
The wave of violence halted activity in Lahore. All government offices were ordered shut, the roads were nearly empty, major markets did not open and stores that had been open pulled down their shutters.
The violence began just after 9 a.m. when a group of gunmen attacked a building housing the Federal Investigation Agency, a law enforcement branch that deals with matters ranging from immigration to terrorism.
"We are under attack," said Mohammad Riaz, an FIA employee reached inside the building via phone by The Associated Press during the assault. "I can see two people hit, but I do not know who they are."
The attack lasted about 1 1/2 hours and ended with the death of two attackers, four government employees and a bystander, senior government official Sajjad Bhutta said. Senior police official Chaudhry Shafiq said one of the dead wore a jacket bearing explosives.
Soon after that assault began, a second band of gunman raided a police training school in Manawan on the outskirts of the city in a brief attack that killed six police officers and four militants, Lahore police chief Pervez Rathore said. One of the gunmen was killed by police at the compound and the other three blew themselves up.
The facility was hit earlier this year in an attack that sparked an eight-hour standoff with the army that left 12 people dead.
A third team of at least eight gunmen scaled the back wall of an elite police commando training center not far from the airport and attacked the facility, Rathore said. Senior police official Malik Iqbal said at least one police constable was killed there.
Lt. Gen. Shafqat Ahmad said five attackers were slain in a gunbattle and suicide blasts in the facility.
Television footage showed helicopters in the air over one of the police facilities and paramilitary forces with rifles and bulletproof vests taking cover behind trees outside a wall surrounding the compound. Rana Sanaullah, provincial law minister of Punjab province, said police were trying to take some of the attackers alive so they could get information from them about their militant networks.
Officials have warned that Taliban fighters close to the border, Punjabi militants spread out across the country and foreign al-Qaida operatives were increasingly joining forces, dramatically increasing the dangers to Pakistan. Punjab is Pakistan's most populous and powerful province, and the Taliban claimed recently that they were activating cells there and elsewhere in the country for assaults.
In the Taliban-riddled northwest, meanwhile, a suicide car bomb exploded next to a police station in the Saddar area of Kohat, collapsing half the building and killing eight people, including police and civilians, police official Afzal Khan said.
"We fear that some policemen are trapped under the rubble," he said.
The U.S. has encouraged Pakistan to take strong action against insurgents who are using its soil as a base for attacks in Afghanistan, where U.S. troops are bogged down in an increasingly difficult war. It has carried out a slew of its own missile strikes in Pakistan's lawless tribal belt over the past year, killing several top militants including Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud.
One suspected U.S. missile strike killed four people overnight Thursday when it hit a compound in an area in North Waziristan tribal region where members of the militant network led by Jalaluddin Haqqani are believed to operate, two intelligence officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media.
Pakistan formally protests the missile strikes as violations of its sovereignty, but many analysts believe it has a secret deal with the U.S. allowing them.
The militants have claimed credit for a wave of attacks that began with an Oct. 5 strike on the U.N. food agency in Islamabad and included a siege of the army's headquarters in the garrison city of Rawalpindi that left 23 people dead.
The Taliban have warned Pakistan to stop pursuing them in military operations.
The Pakistani army has given no time frame for its expected offensive in South Waziristan tribal region, but has reportedly already sent two divisions totaling 28,000 men and blockaded the area.
Fearing the looming offensive, about 200,000 people have fled South Waziristan since August, moving in with relatives or renting homes in the Tank and Dera Ismail Khan areas, a local government official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
Ahmad reported from Islamabad. Associated Press Writers Rasool Dawar in Mir Ali, Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan and Riaz Khan in Peshawar also contributed to this report.


The Associated Press: Gunmen, bomber hit 4 sites in Pakistan, 31 die
 

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The Associated Press: Bomb hits near school in NW Pakistan

Bomb hits near school in NW Pakistan

(AP) – 52 minutes ago

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pakistani police say a bomb has exploded near a school in the northwestern city of Peshawar, injuring five people.

Peshawar police chief Ijaz Khan says the car bomb went off outside a home near a school Thursday evening in the city's Gulshan Rehman area. The school was closed at the time.

Police official Aalam Sher said the injured were being transported to the hospital. Local TV footage showed people who appeared to be teenagers being put into ambulances.

The blast capped a particularly bloody day in Pakistan. Gunmen attacked law enforcement facilities across the eastern city of Lahore on Thursday, while a car bomb devastated a northwestern police station, killing a total of 38 people in an escalating wave of terror.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) — Pakistani police say a large explosion has been heard in the northwestern city of Peshawar.

Local police official Attique Shah says the explosion was heard Thursday evening in the busy Kohat road area and ambulances were rushing to the scene.
 

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AFP: 27 dead as militants ambush Pakistan police

27 dead as militants ambush Pakistan police

By Arif Ali (AFP) – 7 hours ago

LAHORE, Pakistan — Militants unleashed coordinated attacks on Pakistani police in which 27 people died Thursday, storming offices in Lahore and bombing a northwest station to escalate 11 days of carnage.

The sophisticated assaults underscored the weakness of security forces seemingly unable to stop thwart high-profile attacks in the heart of Pakistan, despite promises of a new offensive against the Taliban near the Afghan border.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan, which borders Afghanistan and is a key ally in the US-led fight against terror, is reeling from Taliban-linked attacks in which at least 149 people have died since October 5. Chronology: 11-days of bloodshed

More than 20 gunmen stormed a commando academy in Bedian, on the outskirts of Lahore, a police school in the suburb of Manawan and the city branch of the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) before security forces wrested back control.

Pakistan's weak civilian government said the country was facing a new war after a slew of militant attacks in the country's political heartland of Punjab, away from the hotbed of insurgency in the northwest tribal region.

"They are involved in guerrilla war. First they were active in NWFP (North West Frontier Province), now they are engaged in Punjab. They are terrorists paid to destabilise Pakistan," Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters.

Security officials said 10 attackers were either shot dead or blew themselves up in the attacks around Lahore, Pakistan's cultural capital, and that they were investigating reports that women were among the assailants.

Lahore city police chief Pervez Rathor said six security officials perished at the FIA, along with one assailant and another four attackers at Manawan.

The siege at Bedian dragged on for around four hours before the army announced it was in full control. A senior commander said five attackers were either shot dead or blew themselves up.

"The situation inside Bedian centre is completely under control," said Major General Shafqat Ahmad, the top military commander in the eastern city.

The commander denied that the gunmen had taken hostages during the siege, but said mothers and wives who lived on the academy grounds may have locked themselves in and hunkered down during the exchanges of gunfire.

Thursday's attacks underscored poor police security. The training centre at Manawan was attacked on March 30. Eight police recruits died before security forces finally overpowered the multi-pronged assault after nearly eight hours.

The FIA building in Lahore was bombed in March 2008, killing 16 people.

In the northwest town of Kohat near Peshawar, police spokesman Fazal Naeem said 11 people were killed, including three policemen, Thursday.

"It was a van suicide attack," senior police official Abdullah Khan told AFP. Police said the bomber rammed his vehicle into the outer wall of the police station in Kohat and that the building was badly damaged.

Tens of thousands of people have fled the lawless tribal region ahead of an expected army offensive. Warplanes are pounding Taliban positions and a US missile strike killed the head of the Pakistani Taliban in August.

At least 52 civilians were killed on Friday last week when a suicide bomber blew up his car in a packed market in Peshawar.

The following day, Taliban-linked gunmen staged an audacious raid on army headquarters near Islamabad with 23 people killed in a day-long siege that also saw 39 hostages freed by commando troops.

After the militants' brazen headquarters assault, speculation has intensified that the military is preparing to go into the militant stronghold of South Warizistan, months after the government promised a ground operation.

The pre-dawn strike targeted the suspected militant compound in Dandey Darpa Khel near the Afghan border, a security official said.
 

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Pakistan's Descent into Chaos: A Compendium of Terrorist Attacks in Pakistan

AFP: No answers for escalating Pakistan guerrilla war

No answers for escalating Pakistan guerrilla war


By Nasir Jaffry (AFP) – 2 hours ago

LAHORE, Pakistan — A recent avalanche of attacks killing more than 160 people has opened the flood gates to a widening guerrilla war in Pakistan that the government has no strategy to counter, analysts say.

Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants are striking deeper than ever inside the nuclear-armed Muslim nation of 167 million, exacerbating US security fears as the war deteriorates across the border in Afghanistan.

Coordinated assaults Thursday against police in the cities of Lahore and Kohat came five days after a siege at the headquarters of Pakistan's military, escalating a two-year campaign of bombings that have killed 2,250 people.

"They are involved in guerrilla war. First they were active in NWFP (North West Frontier Province), now they are engaged in Punjab. They are terrorists paid to destabilise Pakistan," said Interior Minister Rehman Malik.

Despite an anticipated offensive against the Taliban in Pakistan's tribal belt on the Afghan border, attention has also fallen on militants operating hundreds of miles away in the political heartland Punjab.

"We are not ready to accept the reality that militancy is on the rise in Punjab... They are now working in collaboration with the Taliban to challenge the state," said security analyst Hasan Askari.

The string of attacks over the last 11 days proves the limited impact of a traditional military offensive in northwest district Swat and the killing of Baitullah Mehsud, the Pakistani Taliban chief, in a US missile attack.

Analysts believe the Taliban and their allies have overcome the infighting about Mehsud's succession -- won by Hakimullah Mehsud -- and are bent on thwarting a widely expected ground operation in South Waziristan.

Pakistani warplanes pounded suspected Taliban targets in the region on Thursday but launching a ground offensive could ensnare the authorities in a catch-22 situation in which militant attacks merely escalate.

"These incidents are a warning to the government and the agencies that they should refrain from an operation against them. If the government still goes for an operation then these attacks can continue," said Askari.

Tens of thousands of people have fled ahead of an expected offensive, but critics accuse the government of failing to formulate any strategy to counter militants -- both in Punjab and in the tribal belt.

"The government does not seem to be ready to go into an offensive," said tribal affairs expert Rahimullah Yousafzai.

"The government is on the defensive. It does not seem to have evolved any long or short-term strategy to counter (the attacks)," he added.

Pakistan's military lacks vital air assets and equipment that have seen Western analysts question its ability to fight a sustained and effective counter-insurgency campaign on mountainous terrain against a hardened enemy.

While the long-term efficacy of military operations against Taliban strongholds in the tribal belt and parts of the northwest is questionable, such operations would be impossible in populated areas of southern Punjab.

Pakistan's civilian government has recently weathered a storm of controversy over fears that a record US aid bill of 7.5 billion dollars would handicap its sovereignty while the attacks have brought renewed US focus on Pakistan.

Following the attack on army headquarters, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned against an "increasing" threat to the state, but voiced confidence Islamabad was in control of its nuclear arsenal.

"The militants want to destabilise the country and want the government to collapse," Ayesha Siddiqua, a Pakistani security analyst, told AFP.

"The government is in a state of denial... Al Qaeda and Taliban have been penetrating their influence in the Punjab and now it is high time for the government and our forces to realise this danger," she added.
 

Rage

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The levels of security in Pakistan are appalling ! The fact that multiple security sites - all of which are supposed to be 'elite' police academies - were attacked in Pakistan's largest city is an abysmal tale. One would have though that security around the 'Manwan' police academy would have been increased- especially after it was attacked in March this year. Instead, you have caitiff overpowering cops at both the FIA and 'Manawan' - and to add insult, the FIA also was the site of a bomb-blast in March. If that were not enough, a suicide bomber rams his car into the wall of a police station compound in Kohat, a bomb goes off in Peshawar and a third team of guerillas scales the walls at 'Bedian' and opens indiscriminate fire and lobbs grenades at the boobies.

Hakeemullah seems to have taken his brothers words to heart.
 

nitesh

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guys check this 00:15 onwards:

Yahoo!

how the hell these guys can join police?
 

bengalraider

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some pics from the attacks on 15th oct


A policeman secures the area where a suicide car bomber detonated his explosives outside a police station killing 10 people, including a child, in Kohat, NWFP, Pakistan, 15 October 2009.





A injured victim is carried out the Manawan Police Academy on 15 October 2009 in Lahore, Pakistan. A group of terrorists attacked 3 police buildings, leaving 29 people, including 10 attackers death and 60 injured. The Manawan Police Academy, the Elite Police academy and a Federal Investigation Agency building were attacked almost simultaneously. Three female Terrorists were also reported to be participating, the police and media reports said. The Taliban have claimed responsibility .
What i found inetersting was the M113 Gavin, anyone here know wheteher those men with the gavin are military or police?
 

NSG_Blackcats

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Car bomb kills 11 at police station in Peshawar​

PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN: A trio of suicide attackers, including a rare female bomber, set off two blasts outside a police station in the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar on Friday, killing 11 people in the latest bloodshed in an unrelenting wave of terror plaguing the country.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility but suspicion fell on the Taliban, who have been blamed for two weeks of attacks that have killed more than 150 people across the country and appear aimed at forcing the government to abandon a planned offensive into the militants' stronghold along the Afghan border.

The Friday afternoon attack targeted a heavily fortified police station next to a mosque in the main city in Pakistan's Taliban-riddled North West Frontier province. A car filled with explosives drove to the main gate of the police station as a motorcycle carrying a man and a woman pulled up behind it, Peshawar police chief Liaquat Ali Khan said.

The woman jumped off and ran toward a nearby housing complex where army officers live, while the man smashed the motorcycle into the car, which exploded into a huge fireball, he said. Police shot at the woman, who detonated explosives she was wearing. The impact of the blast destroyed part of the police station and the mosque next to it, he said. ``If that woman suicide bomber had not been killed, she might have caused more damage,'' Khan said.

Television footage showed the upper part of the wall of the brick mosque shorn off. Security forces swarmed the area as ambulances arrived at the scene. A twisted chunk of metal on the ground was in flames, and a small white car's front section was destroyed.

Link
 

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I am surprised at the series of attack that has taken place this week in Pakistan. It gives me a feeling that things might become worse in Pakistan. They have created training centers and imparted bomb and weapon making training to civilians. I do not know when they will be able to fix it. The worse thing is they all believe in Zaid Hamid and think its Indians that are doing it. It is funny to me in the sense, that now Pakistan is on other side of table, these guys use to ask us evidence for everything, I want to see how many evidence they can provide.
 

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AFP: 13 dead as suicide bombers strike Pakistan police

13 dead as suicide bombers strike Pakistan police

By Lehaz Ali (AFP) – 4 hours ago

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A twin suicide attack tore through a police compound in Pakistan on Friday, killing 13 people and heightening public anger over security breaches behind a wave of recent attacks.

Pakistan, a nuclear-armed power with a weak government on the frontline of the US-led war on terror, has been battered by assaults that have left more than 170 people dead in 11 days.

A woman suicide bomber on a motorbike and a car bomber unleashed fresh chaos Friday, detonating near a police investigations office in a garrison area of the northwestern city of Peshawar, heavily damaging the building, police said.

It was only the second suicide bomb attack by a woman in Pakistan. The twin blasts flung human limbs across the street, splattering blood on the ground and scattering shoes, an AFP reporter at the scene saw.

"Police tried to intercept a woman sitting on a motorcycle with a terrorist. She blew herself up and after that there was another blast when a suicide attacker sitting in a car exploded," said Liaqat Ali Khan, city police chief.

"There are two women and a child among the dead. The car exploded close to the police building. The building was badly damaged," Sahibzada Mohammad Anees, the top administrative official, told reporters.

Officials said that 13 people were killed in all, including three policemen, and that seven wounded were in critical condition.

The blood-soaked identity card of a second-grade school boy lay on the ground as rescue workers pulled bodies and the wounded from the rubble.

The main gate of the two-storey police Central Investigation Agency building was destroyed, the upper portion of a mosque on the premises was damaged and a crater was punched out of the road in front.

Home to 2.5 million Pakistanis, Peshawar is the largest city in the northwest and lies on the edge of the lawless tribal belt where Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants sheltered after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan.

Critics rounded on the civilian authorities for being unable to act on intelligence to prevent attacks being staged by militants who are constantly refining their tactics and taking the initiative.

"Terrorists have taken the initiative out of the hands of the security agencies, keeping them busy in cities and not allowing them to target their sources in remote areas. It is an intelligent move," said analyst Hasan Askari.

"They will continue to build pressure if they are not challenged. You don't have to make statements about launching an offensive in advance. It should be swift and a surprise," he said.

Officials have interpreted the string of attacks as a bid to thwart a widely anticipated military offensive in South Waziristan, where the Taliban and Al-Qaeda are believed to have carved out safe havens.

Although there was no formal claim of responsibility, suspicion has fallen on Pakistan's Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP) movement and Al-Qaeda, as well as homegrown Islamist groups Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Jaish-e-Muhammad.

At least 40 people died Thursday in a string of assaults on security buildings in Lahore, at the heart of the country's political heartland, and in bombings in the northwest.

Residents in Lahore, the cultural capital noted for its secular elite, asked how militants could have penetrated so far and so easily from their sanctuaries in the deeply conservative tribal belt on the Afghan border.

Militants had already carried out bloody attacks on the Manawan academy in March this year and on the FIA building in March 2008.

"We need to drastically improve security," said Jehanzaeb Burki, a former police commander and member of a high powered committee formed by the Punjab provincial government on Friday.

"There is also a need to improve intelligence gathering and sharing processes to prevent such terror attacks in future," he said.

Police said dozens of people had been picked up in overnight raids in slum areas of Lahore and neighbourhoods populated by Afghans.
 

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