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Bomber kills 20 at Hangu hospital


Saif-Ul-Islam & Nader Buneri
HANGU/PESHAWAR – As many as 20 persons, including two women and three policemen, were killed and 16 others got seriously injured when a suicide bomber rammed his explosive-laden vehicle into a hospital in Pass Kalay area of district Hangu on Friday.
Sources said that the suicide bomber blew up his explosive packed tractor in front of the newly under construction Zohra Hospital in Pass Kaly village. The blast caused severe fear and panic among the masses, besides jolting the entire area and damaging around six houses.
Soon after the blast rescue teams rushed towards the site and retrieved the dead and the injured from the blast site. They were shifted to District Headquarter Hospital, Hangu, while seriously injured persons were shifted to Lady Reading Hospital Peshawar.
Police, bomb disposal squad and army personnel also rushed towards the site and cordoned off the area.
Talking to media persons, District Police Chief Abdul Rashid confirmed that it was a suicide blast.
He said that the hospital was being run by a private Shiite Muslim trust, which also operated a nearby Shiite mosque and seminary.
Just two days before a teenage suicide bomber killed 17 people at a busy market in Kohat, which neighbours Hangu.
One of the prominent social and political figures Syed Hussain Ali Shah told The Nation that there were threats that militants would target the hospital and Imambargah and they had appraised police in this regard. It appears to be a sectarian attack, he added.
District Hangu is one of the sensitive areas as it is attached with three tribal agencies including Kurram, North Waziristan and Orakzai.
Reuters adds: Officials said Shiite Muslims were praying in a room inside the hospital when the bomb exploded in the town of Hangu. Several police officials said the bomber drove the tractor into the hospital in Hangu.
They said three policemen were among the dead.
PakistanÂ’s US-backed government faces Taliban insurgents who have sustained a campaign of suicide bombings in defiance of a series of military offensives launched last year against their strongholds in the northwest.
Pakistan has been bracing for sectarian violence during Muharram, which began on Wednesday last. Sunni militant groups often attack Shiite gatherings during this period. There have been several sectarian attacks and clashes in Hangu in recent years.
PakistanÂ’s government, which Washington sees as a vital ally in its war against militancy, faces a growing threat from what officials and analysts call a growing nexus of militant groups.
ItÂ’s a murky mix that includes al Qaeda, Pakistani Taliban militants and other groups. Some are anti-Western while others are driven mostly by sectarian hatred. Wednesday, a suicide bomber blew himself up beside a minibus in the nearby town of Kohat, killing at least 16 people, officials said.

Bomber hits buses convoy in Hangu: 12 dead


HANGU – At least 12 people were killed and 30 others got injured when a suicide bomber attacked a convoy of civilians guarded by security forces here in tehsil Tal on Friday.
According to details, the suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden vehicle into the convoy of vehicles escorted by law enforcement agencies that was on its way from Tal of Hangu district to Parachinar, Kurram Agency, on Tal-Parachinar Road in the jurisdiction of Dandore area of Hangu.
The injured were rushed to CMH Tal and District Headquarters Hospital Hangu where the condition of some of them was stated to be critical.
Being a sensitive area, passenger caravans passing from this area are usually accompanied by four to five vehicles of security forces. Four vehicles were also destroyed in the attack. Soon after the incident, the security forces cordoned off the area and imposed curfew. Similarly Tal Bazaar was also closed down.
President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Syed Yousuf Raza Gilani strongly condemned the suicide attack. The two leaders in their separate messages expressed their deep shock and grief over the sad incident in which several security personnel and civilians were killed.
They expressed their resolve not to be deterred by such acts of violence and vowed to continue the fight against terrorism till its logical conclusion.
The two leaders conveyed their grief to the bereaved families and directed best possible treatment for the injured. They also sought an enquiry into the incident and directed the provincial authorities to investigate and submit a report.
NWFP Governor Owais Ahmad Ghani, Chief Minister Ameer Haider Khan Hoti, ANP President Asfandyar Wali Khan and Provincial President Afrasyab Khattak have condemned the attack. They expressed sympathies with the families of those who breathed their lost in this deadly suicide attack and prayed for early recovery of the injured.
Agencies add: “Our convoy was hit by a big explosion,” said witness Javed Hussain, who was in the convoy of vehicles carrying Shiite Muslims to the city of Peshawar. “It’s all chaos here. I myself have seen four dead and two of them are children. I have seen four wounded women.”
Mir Chaman, Deputy Superintendent of Police in Hangu, said at least 12 people were killed and 30 were wounded.
Kohat Commissioner Khalid Khan told AFP the 12 dead included four women and two children. Police said 31 people were wounded. “The target was a Shia convoy. This is sectarian violence,” he said. Police said a curfew had been slapped on the market area. “The dead include seven Shias who were travelling in the convoy,” said police officer Abdul Rashid Khan.
Local lawmaker Mufti Janan Ahmed said the bomber ploughed his vehicle into the centre of the 20-vehicle convoy, which was carrying Shia travellers coming from the northwestern towns of Parachinar to Kohat.
Police official Islamuddin Khattak said the blast destroyed five vehicles and police were battling to extinguish the resulting blaze.
According to bomb disposal squad, about seven kilogram explosive material was used in the blast.
More than 3,000 people have been killed in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since July 2007, a campaign blamed on militants opposed to the governmentÂ’s alliance with the United States. But after a significant rise in bloodshed in late 2009, there has been a marked decline in attacks so far this year.
There have been no mass civilian losses or bombings in major cities since a bombing at a volleyball match killed 101 people on New YearÂ’s Day. That was around two weeks before the US drone attack that may have killed Hakimullah Mehsud.

Pakistan bomb kills ex-provincial minister

A suspected Taliban bomb attack targeted a former Pakistan provincial cabinet minister yesterday, killing him and three other people in the country’s restive northwest, police said. The bomb exploded in Bagto village, about 10km from the town of Hangu in an area with a history of sectarian