Thursday, May 28, 2009

Taliban deputy claims responsibility for Pakistan bomb attacks

A senior leader of the Taliban in Pakistin today claimed responsibility for the bomb attack in Lahore that killed at least 24 people and wounded hundreds more, saying it was revenge for the army offensive against militants in Swat valley.

Hakimullah Mehsud, a deputy to the Pakistani Taliban chief, Baitullah Mehsud, told the Associated Press that the attack on the offices of the police chief and Pakistan's main spy agency, the ISI, was connected to the military operation.

"It was in response to the Swat operation where innocent people have been killed," Mehsud said. The little-known group Taliban Movement in Punjab has also claimed responsibility for the attack.

The attack was the third in Lahore in as many months and Pakistanis have been bracing themselves for violent retaliation since the army launched a sweeping operation against the Taliban in Swat valley three weeks ago.

"These terrorists were defeated in Fata [Federally Administered Tribal Areas] and Swat and now they have come here," the interior minister, Rehman Malik, said yesterday. "This is a war, and it is a war for our survival."

As Malik spoke, rescuers were scrambling to pull the dead and wounded from the wreckage of destroyed buildings. Twelve police officers and one child were among the dead, a television station reported. Twenty people were injured when the roof of the operating theatre in a nearby hospital collapsed on them.

Sajjad Bhutto, a senior government official, said four men had leapt from a car that pulled up outside a police building near the ISI headquarters. The men, who were described as young and clean-shaven by witnesses, started shooting.

Guards outside the spy agency returned fire, sparking a short gun battle that ended when the car, which had crashed into a security barrier, exploded. The blast levelled an emergency response building across the street and sheared a wall from the ISI office, where two intelligence officers and six others were killed.

It left a scene of devastation along the mall – a tree-lined, colonial-era thoroughfare. A petrol station was destroyed, and broken glass and crushed vehicles littered the road. Later distraught relatives turned up, looking for family members.

Bhutto said 100kg of explosives were used in the bomb.

The attack was no surprise, said Dr Hasan-Askari Rizvi, a Lahore-based defence analyst. "We were expecting there would be some kind of retaliation," he said, drawing a link with the ongoing operations in Swat. "The surprise was that it was such a massive attack."

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/may/28/pakistan-bomb

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Punjab situation under control, says Parkash Singh Badal

Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on Monday said the situation in the state, hit by violence following the death of a Sikh
Shooting in Vienna Gurudwara
religious leader in a clash in Vienna, was "under control" and that normalcy will return soon.

"We all are very hurt with the developments in the state but it is a religious issue and it is very difficult to control the emotions. But at some places the protestors turned very violent and we are trying our level best to curb them," Badal told reporters here.

He also confirmed that one person was killed and eight others injured when police opened fire on protestors in Jalandhar city.

"All this happened suddenly and chaos spread rapidly in different towns that made it difficult for us to control the situation. However, now the situation is under control and very soon things would become normal," he added.

"I have also talked to Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna over the phone and told him to ask the Austrian government to catch the guilty at the earliest," he said.

Violence erupted after followers of Dera Sachh Khand burnt train, blocked key highways and destroyed public and private property to protest an attack Sunday on its leaders in a gurdwara in the Austrian capital Vienna.

Sant Rama Nand, the second-in-command of the sect, died in a hospital in Vienna after being attacked by a rival Sikh group. The clash also left 16 people injured.

The condition of the sect head Sant Niranjan Dass, 68, who was the second guest speaker at the Vienna gurdwara, was stable after undergoing emergency surgery, doctors in Vienna said.

Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/