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Saturday 25 December 2010

Pakistan bomb attack kills dozens


At least 42 people killed and dozens injured after 'female suicide bomber' attacks town in northwest of the country.
Last Modified: 25 Dec 2010 08:04 GMT
The bomber, dressed in a traditional women's burqa, first lobbed two hand grenades into the crowd [AFP]

At least 42 people have been killed and some 60 others injured after a suspected suicide bomber attacked a crowd of people receiving food aid in northwest Pakistan.

Al Jazeera's Kamal Hyder, reporting from Islamabad, said that the incident took place on Saturday morning at a World Food Programme (WFP) distribution centre in the area of Bajaur.

"A lone suicide bomber penetrated into the crowd and then detonated his device and according to reports from the area there are high casualties."

Fazal-e-Rabbi, a local police official, said that the bomber, dressed in a traditional women's burqa, first lobbed two hand grenades into the crowd.

Rabbi said that the attacker, believed to be a woman, then detonated an explosive vest.

No group has yet claimed responsibility for this attack.

Our correspondent said that Bajaur is not equipped to deal with such incidents even in the best of times and hospitals are struggling to cope.

"It is a public holiday, both being Christmas and also the birthday of the founder of Pakistan, so doctors were called back to the hospital on loud speakers."

Series of attacks

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The attack in the Bajaur region on the Afghan border came a day after a big clash between Pakistani Taliban fighters and security forces in the neighbouring Mohmand region left 11 soldiers and 24 fighters dead.

Amjad Jamal, spokesman for the WFP in Pakistan, told Al Jazeera that none of UN agency's staff were injured in this attack.

"The suicide attack was not within the distribution site, it was at a security checkpoint some 250 to 300 metres away from our site," Jamal said.

"People were coming to get their food rations from the WFP site. Once they get themselves screened, then they come to the site, so there was a big number of people waiting in that area.

"For the time being this particular point will be closed because the security authorities have cordoned off the area, but all other WFP operations within the country remain open and our relief operations will continue."

Officials and witnesses said the death toll could be much higher.

Regular confrontations

Meanwhile, Pakistan army helicopter gunships and artillery killed 40 more fighters in the second day of large-scale fighting near the border with Afghanistan.

Amjad Ali Khan, a government official in Mohmand tribal region, said that the gunships backed by artillery pounded fighter's hideouts on Saturday, killing 40 of them.

Earlier this month dozens of people were killed in a string of similar attacks.

Pakistan's volatile ethnic Pashtun tribal lands on the Afghan border have seen regular confrontations between fighters and the army.

Hundreds of fighters have been killed and many of their strongholds have been captured, but they have retaliated and killed hundreds of people in a campaign of bomb attacks across the country.

A senior military official said in October that it would take at least six months to clear fighters from Bajaur and Mohmand areas.

Around 4,000 people have died in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since government forces raided the Red mosque in Islamabad in 2007.

The attacks have been blamed on networks linked to the Taliban and al-Qaeda.


Source:
Al Jazeera and agencies

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