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Blasts kill 9 in Pakistan militant stronghold

DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — Explosions reportedly caused by missiles fired from U.S. drone aircraft hit a house and seminary linked to a key Taliban commander in northwestern Pakistan on Monday, killing at least nine people, officials and witnesses said.

The blasts occurred in a village in North Waziristan, a militant stronghold in Pakistan's wild tribal belt and a possible hiding place for Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahri.
A Pakistani intelligence official, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of his job, said three suspected foreign militants and two children were among the dead in what appeared to be part of a stepped-up U.S. campaign against militant havens in Pakistan's tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan.

The targets were linked to Jalaluddin Haqqani, a veteran of the jihad against Soviet troops in Afghanistan in the 1980s who American commanders count among their most dangerous foes.

Haqqani and his son, Siraj, have been linked to attacks this year including an attempt to kill Afghan President Hamid Karzai and a bold attack on a luxury hotel in Kabul. Haqqani network operatives plague U.S. forces in Afghanistan's eastern Khost province with ambushes and roadside bombs.
Reports varied on casualties in Monday's attack in northwestern Pakistan. The intelligence official said 12 people died — three suspected foreign militants, two local men, four women and three children — when several missiles hit the seminary and adjacent houses in the village of Dande Darba Khel.

Another 15 people — mostly women and children — were injured, he said, citing informers.

A second Pakistani intelligence official gave a similar account.

Neither identified the victims further.

Rehman Uddin, a Taliban militant who said he was at the scene, said 20 people died and 18 were injured.

“Some of our brothers were killed, but most are women and children,” Uddin told The Associated Press by telephone.

One of the homes hit belonged to Siraj Haqqani, but neither he nor his father had been there at the time, Uddin said.

Pakistani troops had raided the seminary at least three times in the past.

Maj. Murad Khan, an army spokesman, confirmed only that blasts had occurred in Dande Darba Khel and that a dozen people were injured. He said the cause of the explosions was under investigation.

Bakht Niaz told the AP by phone that he and several other shopkeepers saw two Predator drones flying over the area before several explosions around 10 a.m. (0400 GMT).

“We got out of our shops and ran for safety,” Niaz said.

Abdur Rahim, a local resident, said he saw militants who refused to let him and others to approach the scene, even to help, remove nine bodies from the destroyed houses near the seminary.

Injured women and children were loaded into pickup trucks and driven toward nearby Miran Shah, the region's main town, Rahim said.

The U.S. has pushed Pakistan to crack down on insurgents, warning that they are using pockets of the northwest as safe havens from which to plan attacks on American and NATO forces in neighboring Afghanistan.

However, Pakistan has struggled to contain rising militancy within its borders, and the fledgling government has tried both peace talks and military operations to stop the insurgents.

A U.S.-led ground assault last week on a Pakistani tribal region, which was said to kill at least 15, prompted sharp protests from Islamabad and heightened speculation that Washington has given a green light for more aggressive cross-border strikes.

Several recent missile attacks in the tribal belt, considered a likely hiding place for al-Qaida chiefs Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri, have been attributed to U.S. forces.

Asif Ali Zardari, who won Pakistan's presidential election on Saturday, has vowed to be tough on militancy. However, many Pakistanis blame their country's close alliance with Washington for fanning the violence.

A suicide car bomber killed 35 people near the northwestern city of Peshawar during Saturday's voting.

On Monday, officials said they had arrested a youth wearing a suicide jacket in Nowshera, 30 miles (45 kilometers) east of Peshawar. The army said two soldiers seized the bomber before he could attack a security forces convoy.

Pakistani Taliban have claimed responsibility for a string of suicide blasts and said they were revenge for ongoing Pakistani military operations in the northwest.

LA Times

 

Author

Bilal Qureshi

Bilal Qureshi is a resident of Washington, DC, so it is only natural that he is tremendously interested in politics. He is also fascinated by the relationship between Pakistan, the country of his birth, and the United States of America, his adopted homeland. Therefore, he makes every effort to read major newspapers in Pakistan and what is being said about Washington, while staying fully alert to the analysis and the news being reported in the American press about Pakistan. After finishing graduate school, he started using his free time to write to various papers in Pakistan in an effort to clarify whatever misconceptions he noticed in the press, especially about the United States. This pastime became a passion after his letters were published in Vanity Fair and The New Yorker and his writing became more frequent and longer. Now, he is here, writing a blog about Pakistan managed by Foreign Policy Association.

Areas of Focus:
Taliban; US-Pakistan Relations; Culture and Society

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