Kuwait Times

Bomb kills 40 in northwest Pakistan

Pakistani govt condemns drone attack

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PESHAWAR: A car bomb ripped through a crowded street in Peshawar’s oldest bazaar yesterday, killing 40 people in the third blast to hit the troubled city in a week, officials said. There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity. The explosion appeared to have been caused by a bomb planted in a parked car and detonated by remote control, said police officer Zahid Khan. It went off near a mosque and a police station, damaging the house of worship and nearby shops and engulfing many vehicles in flames, police said.

At least 40 people were killed and 90 wounded, said Jamil Shah, a spokesman for Lady Reading Hospital, where the victims were taken. Such attacks in Peshawar, in northweste­rn Pakistan, have claimed more than 140 lives since last Sunday, when two suicide bombers blew themselves up in a crowd of worshipper­s at a church, killing 85 people. On Friday, 19 people died when a bomb planted on a bus carrying government employees exploded in the Peshawar outskirts.

The Sunni militant group Jundullah claimed responsibi­lity for the church attack, saying it targeted Christians to avenge the deaths of Muslims killed by US drone strikes. After the latest attack, one man at the hospital said 13 members of a single family were among the dead. Mohammad Alam said they had come to Peshawar from a nearby village to invite him to their son’s wedding. He said they were in a van when the bomb exploded.

A bookshop owner, Nazar Ali, had just opened his shop when the bomb went off. “It was a huge blast that was fol- lowed by fire in vehicles. Thick black smoke covered the air and splinters spread all over. I saw people lying dead and bleeding all over,” he said.

Many of the old buildings in the historic Qissa Khawani market are wood, which easily caught fire, said senior police officer Shafqat Malik. People bloodied and covered with ash ran from the scene, one man carrying a young child whose face appeared blackened from soot.

The new government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has said it would like to negotiate with Pakistan’s largest militant group, the Taleban, to end the bloodshed, but so far those efforts have made little progress.

On Saturday, a spokesman for the Taleban said Sharif’s demand that the militants lay down their weapons and respect the constituti­on indicated the new leader is not serious about peace talks. Previously Sharif had not given preconditi­ons for the talks.

Sharif “showed that he is following the policy of America and its allies,” the spokesman said. “We will hold talks with (the government) only when it gets the real power to take decisions.” Also in northweste­rn Pakistan, two missiles from an American drone hit a compound in North

Waziristan yesterday, killing three militants affiliated with the Punjab province branch of the Pakistani Taleban, said two intelligen­ce officers. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. The Pakistan government condemned both the bomb blast and the drone attack. — AP

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 ?? — AFP ?? PESHAWAR: Pakistani shop owners gather at the site of a bomb explosion in the busy Kissa Khwani market in Peshawar yesterday. A car bomb killed at least 40 people in Pakistan’s northweste­rn city of Peshawar, officials said, the third deadly strike to...
— AFP PESHAWAR: Pakistani shop owners gather at the site of a bomb explosion in the busy Kissa Khwani market in Peshawar yesterday. A car bomb killed at least 40 people in Pakistan’s northweste­rn city of Peshawar, officials said, the third deadly strike to...

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