Pakistan death toll rises to four

A suicide bomber struck an area full of government buildings in Pakistan’s main north-west city today, killing four people and underscoring that militant groups retain strength despite being under siege by the army.

A suicide bomber struck an area full of government buildings in Pakistan’s main north-west city today, killing four people and underscoring that militant groups retain strength despite being under siege by the army.

The attack in Peshawar was the second in three days, and the latest in a wave of violence that has killed more than 500 people in Pakistan since October.

Insurgents are suspected of avenging a US-supported Pakistani army offensive against the Taliban in a north-west tribal region along the Afghan border.

The attackers have struck a range of targets, from markets popular with women to security checkpoints.

Today’s blast rocked a busy sector of Peshawar where buildings housing the state-run airline, a public school and a government insurance company are located.

TV footage from the scene showed shattered glass and debris covering a wide area as security officials flooded the zone.

Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the region’s information minister, told the ARY news channel army installations were also nearby, but he “cannot say for sure what the target was”.

The bomber walked up to a checkpoint along the road and detonated his explosives when a police officer asked him to stop, city police chief Liaquat Ali said.

He paid glowing tributes to the dead policeman, saying that, if he had not acted, the attacker might have struck a more crowded area, killing a higher number of people.

On Tuesday, a suicide bomber set off explosives at the Peshawar Press Club, a brazen attack on the media in what has long been an unsafe environment for journalists to operate.

Peshawar has been hit at least seven other times in the onslaught which began in October. In one case, at least 112 people died when a car bomb went off in a market frequented by many women – one of the country’s deadliest attacks.

The government condemned the bombings but vowed it will not be deterred in its battle to eliminate the Pakistani Taliban from its soil.

The army offensive in South Waziristan tribal region has left hundreds of militants dead, but many are believed to have simply fled to other parts of the country’s lawless tribal belt bordering Afghanistan.

Even though the Pakistani Taliban may be under siege, it is possible they are relying on other allied militant groups to help carry out the strikes across the country. Strong networks are believed to exist among the varying extremist factions in Pakistan, many of whom want to see the Pakistani state toppled because of its relations with the United States.

Pakistan recently boosted security all over the country, including Peshawar, because it is the Islamic holy month of Muharram, which is often marred by bombings and fighting between the country’s Sunni Muslims and its Shiite minority, authorities said.

Muharram is especially important for Shiites, who stage processions to mourn the 7th century death of the prophet Muhammad’s grandson – an event which led to the split in Islam between the Shiite and Sunni sects.

The culmination of Shiite rites is Ashura, the 9th and 10th days of Muharram, when Shiites stage processions, beating their bare backs with chains and blades, bloodying themselves in a sign of penitence over the death of Mohammed’s grandson, Imam Hussein.

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