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Three US soldiers among 9 killed in Dir blast

Hari

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Pakistan school bombing kills eight

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A bomb blast in Pakistan killed eight people on Wednesday, including four foreign aid workers and children at the opening of a school which been rebuilt after an Islamist attack.

Journalists were among up to 55 people wounded when the bomb exploded as Pakistani paramilitary forces escorted a group of foreign and local visitors to the inauguration ceremony for the newly built school in the volatile northwest.

"Eight people were killed in this blast -- four foreigners, one security guard and three schoolgirls," district police chief Mumtaz Zarin told AFP. "The school building was also badly damaged and three vehicles destroyed."

Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the attack and ordered an investigation into the roadside bombing in Koto village, about 10 kilometres (six miles) from Taimargara, the main town in Lower Dir district.

"The four foreigners were working for an NGO (non-governmental organisation). They are from the international community," said a spokesman for the paramilitary Frontier Corps.

Chief doctor Mohammad Wakeel at the local Taimargara Hospital said four schoolgirls were killed and dozens wounded.

"We have four dead bodies. They are schoolgirls aged 10 to 15. We have received 65 injured, most of them are girls," he told AFP. Three journalists were also wounded, he added.

The nationalities of the dead foreigners were being investigated, police and foreign embassy officials said.

"We are checking on the whereabouts of all our people," US embassy spokesman Rick Snelsire told AFP.

The school was blown up in January 2009 and was rebuilt with the help of a foreign NGO, said local police official Yaqub Khan.

"Today there was a formal inauguration ceremony of the school. The bomb was buried on the roadside close to the school. There were nine rooms in the school, three rooms were completely destroyed," he told AFP.

Western groups have been working with the Pakistani government to promote girls' education in parts of the northwest, where Taliban-linked militants opposed to co-education have destroyed hundreds of schools.

Pakistan carried out a major offensive to crush a Taliban insurgency last year in Lower Dir and the neighbouring districts of Swat and Buner. Related article: US missile volley kills militants

Lower Dir borders Bajaur, a district in Pakistan's lawless tribal belt where a suicide bombing killed 17 people at a military checkpoint on Saturday and where Pakistan is waging a new air and ground assault on militants.

US officials call Pakistan's tribal belt the most dangerous place on Earth and, following the 2001 US-led invasion of Afghanistan, the headquarters of Al-Qaeda, which has links to the Taliban and other extreme Islamist networks.

Late Tuesday, up to 10 unmanned US drone aircraft launched about 18 missiles on hideouts and training camps in five isolated settlements of the Dattakhel area in tribal North Waziristan, killing 31 people, mostly Islamist militants.

North Waziristan borders Afghanistan and is infested with Taliban insurgents, Al-Qaeda operatives and fighters with the Haqqani militant network.

"Thirty-one people, mostly militants, were killed," a senior security official told AFP.

"Eight to 10 US drones were involved... there were no such big strikes in the past, this was the heaviest," said another Pakistani security official.

He said the village of Daigan bore the brunt of the bombing raid, where militants had dug trenches and mounted anti-aircraft guns on vehicles to try to bring down the US drones which fly almost daily over the area.

"Some of the bodies are badly mutilated and beyond recognition," said resident Syed Mohammad.

Drone attacks have soared since US President Barack Obama put Pakistan at the heart of his administration's fight against Al-Qaeda, fanning anti-American sentiment in the conservative Muslim country.

US officials, however, say the drone programme has killed a number of high-value extremists and is a key weapon in the war on Al-Qaeda and a resurgent Taliban, across the border in Afghanistan.

Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud has been a target of the drone attacks. A number of reports say that he died of injuries sustained in a January strike on North Waziristan, but the Taliban deny that he is dead.

Link here
 
Why these cowards are attacking school children
 
Three US soldiers among 9 killed in Dir blast

DIR: Nine persons including three foreigners were killed and 65 others wounded in a bomb blast in tehsil Balambat of lower Dir.

The blast occurred in the roadside bombing in Koto village, about 10 kilometers (six miles) from Taimargara, the main town in lower Dir district. The explosion also damaged the girls’ school building.

According to US news agency, three US soldiers attached with the Frontier Corps (FC) as trainer were killed in the blast. Three girls students, a security man and two civilians were also killed in the blast. Sixty-five persons including 40 girls’ students sustained injuries in the incident. The bodies and injured were shifted to district headquarters hospital Timargara. Security forces have cordoned off the area.

http://thenews.com.pk/updates.asp?id=97783
 
Bomb kills three US marines, TTP claim attack

TIMERGARA: Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan have claimed responsibility for the bomb attack on Wednesday that killed three American soldiers, a spokesman for the network claimed in a telephone call to AFP.

“We claim responsibility for the blast,” Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) spokesman Azam Tariq said, calling from an undisclosed location.

A bomb planted outside a girls' school killed three US soldiers in the Lower Dir district.

In scenes that have become familiar in the battle between Taliban militants and the state, a young girl trapped below the stones of a collapsed wall cried out for help.

Three children and a Pakistani paramilitary soldier were also killed and 45 people were wounded in the blast near Swat Valley, where the government mounted a crackdown nearly a year ago it said had cleared out al Qaeda-linked Taliban.

Wednesday’s blast occurred in Koto village in Lower Dir’s Hajiabad area. It was triggered by a remote-controlled device.

The three US soldiers were part of a small unit that trains Pakistani Frontier Corps responsible for security in the northwestern areas near the Afghan border seen as part of a global militant hub.


The Taliban spokesman alleged the dead Americans belonged to security company Blackwater Worldwide, which has earned global notoriety over its activities in Iraq.

However the US embassy said three US military personnel who were due to attend the opening of a girls' school were killed and two others wounded.

“The Americans killed were members of the Blackwater group. We know they are responsible for bomb blasts in Peshawar and other Pakistani cities,” said the Taliban spokesman.

“We have warned we will take revenge and today we have avenged the deaths of innocent people,” Tariq said in reference to an October 28, 2009 attack that killed 125 people in Pakistan's northwestern city of Peshawar.

Blackwater Worldwide changed its name to Xe in February 2009, following what the company said was a switch of business focus.

The embassy condemned the “vicious terrorist bombing” that targeted personnel who were due to attend the inauguration of a girls' school renovated with US assistance.

“Three Americans were killed and two injured in a terrorist bomb explosion at about 11:20 am today in the Lower Dir district,” a statement said.

“The Americans were US military personnel in Pakistan to conduct training at the invitation of the Pakistan Frontier Corps,” added the statement.

“They were in Lower Dir to attend the inauguration ceremony of a school for girls that had recently been renovated with US humanitarian assistance.”

After Wednesday's attack which left a crater outside the school, an elderly man walked through the destruction holding a pile of books as soldiers stood by.

Locals tried to rescue school girls in blue uniform trapped below rubble. Others helped carry away the wounded.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi condemned Wednesday's bombing in the district of Lower Dir. He said “terrorism will never be allowed to succeed in its nefarious designs”. —Agencies
 
These anti education, anti humanity creatures have always been against educating girls, and it is not the first time they are targeing school kids.
 
We dont want US marines in our soil ,why GOP allowed them ?

This type of incidence will act as moral boaster for talaban , PA operation is just to up root Al Qaeada from our soil nothing more or less.

PA is capable to tackle TTP terrorists so better US forces(Xe) should not be stationed or operate in Pakistan it will further escalation tension in fundamental islamic groups and then there is possibility that any Mullah give Fatwa for Jehad.
 
It was a suicide car bomb which targeted the convoy. The US guys were trainers at the Dir Scouts Camp, giving training to Dir Scouts.
 
TIMERGARA: Three American soldiers were among the eight killed in a suicide attack in the northern Lower Dir district on Wednesday, a senior security official said.

The bomber drove his explosives-laden vehicle into a convoy of the paramilitary Frontier Corps that was on its way to inaugurate a school in Kad that was blown up by the Taliban but rebuilt with money from the United States Assistance for International Development (USAID), the official said.


Two US army trainers were also amongst the 131 wounded, most of who were school children. Two journalists accompanying the convoy were also wounded.

Operation Commander, Col. Nadeem Mirza is also reported to have sustained injuries.

The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan has accepted responsibility for the bombing, a private television channel said.

Earlier reports had indicated that the convoy was hit by a roadside bombing near Koto village, Hajiabad but police and security officials now say the vehicle laden with 140 kilograms of explosives had done the job.

The officials were also insisting that the foreigners killed in the bombing were US aid workers from the USAID.

Condemning what it called vicious terrorist bombing, a US Embassy statement said the Americans were US military personnel in Pakistan to conduct training at the invitation of the Pakistan Frontier Corps.

They were in Lower Dir to attend the inauguration ceremony of a school for girls that had recently been renovated with US humanitarian assistance, the statement said.

Amongst those killed were four school girls and a paramilitary soldier. “Our teacher was teaching us Islamic education when the explosion caused the roof of our class to cave in”, Samina, a 5th grade student of the school said.

The official said that the American soldiers were trainers training the Dir Scouts of the Frontier Corps in Dir.

“They usually wore Pakistani dress, shalwar qameez, and Chitrali caps to conceal their identity”, the official said.

The Americans were traveling in an armoured vehicle with electronic jammers.

“A remote controlled explosives device would not have done the damage. This was clearly a targeted hit. The bomber targeted their vehicle”, the official said, requesting he not be named.

The killed US soldiers have been identified as Sgt John, Sgt Sikle and Sgt Andrew. A US army major identified as Maj. Roth has been critically wounded.

The bodies of the slain US soldiers and wounded paramilitary personnel were later evacuated to Peshawar by helicopters.

“It was a huge blast”, local journalist, Haroon Rashid, who accompanied the convoy and was also wounded in the explosion,” he told Dawn.

“The army has sealed off the area and no one is being allowed to move. I am here with wounds on my leg and arms and am waiting to be evacuated”, he said on phone from the scene of the occurrence.

The security official said the group was on its way to inaugurate a primary school in Kad, Lower Dir that had been blown up by militants but was rebuilt by USAID.

The security forces immediately sealed off the area and began evacuating the dead and wounded.

Administrative head of the District Headquarters Hospital in Lower Dir, Dr. Wakil Mohammad said that a total of 122 school children were brought to the hospital for medical treatment.

The bomb also damaged an adjoining girls’ middle school. The damage to the two schools would affect education of nearly six hundred children.

The security forces cordoned off the area and launched a search operation. The official said that twenty-two people had been rounded up for questioning.
 
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