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Acts of Terrorism in Pakistan


It is TIME that Pakistani Army used the public opinion that's changed drastically due to the shooting of Malala, a 14 year old girl, a child who almost got killed in the name of Taliban's Islam when Islam itself PROHIBITS killing and terrorizing anyone!!!

This is now a defining moment in Pakistan's history. The people of Pakistan and the Army need to support each other and stand united and CRUSH these evil terrorist who care for no religion, including their own, who care not for human life, including their own people and who used twisted logic and put a black mark on over 1.2 billion muslims who don't follow their version of Islam.

If Pakistan seizes this opportunity, it's people are with its Army, the US and the world is with you and rooting out these crazy maniac Talibans will be the FIRST HUGE STEP towards modernization and growth of Pakistan. A SAFE and HEALTHY, FEAR FREE environment is needed for Pakistan's next generation to grow, get educated, take the country in the right direction and expand the economy, change the meaning of life by adding prosperity and create a system that provides a better lifestyle for all. Where Christians, Muslims, Hindus and Jews can come and go without threats and scares. Foreign investment comes in and Pakistan becomes the only Muslim and a RESPONSIBLE nuclear power, becoming a roll model for others. We all pray for Malala's life, health and everyone's safety. The US is with you during this time. Your resolve will defeat these barbaric Talibans who've lost the definition of humanity from their own religion.
 
Car bomb kills 17 people in Darra Adam Khel | DAWN.COM

PESHAWAR: A car bomb tore through a crowded bazaar outside an office for anti-Taliban tribal elders Saturday in Darra Adam Khel— a town located between Kohat and Peshawar— killing at least 17 people, officials said.

The blast was the latest to strike the troubled area near the Afghan border, showing militants still pose a threat to the stability of key US ally Pakistan despite government offensives against the Taliban and their supporters.

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but the Pakistani Taliban have staged similar attacks in the tribal region of Darra Adam Khel to punish elders for backing security forces in offensives against militants.

The explosives-laden car was parked near the office of one of anti-Taliban peace committees that have been formed by local elders trying to rid the area of militants, regional government administrator Fakhruddin Khan said.

It was unclear how many people were in the office at the time, but Khan said those killed included tribal elders and passers-by. He said 40 people also were wounded and the attack destroyed 35 shops and eight vehicles.

The dead and wounded, including some in critical condition, had been transported to hospitals in Peshawar.

The region, which is in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, is famous for its weapons market selling guns made by local craftsmen.

Provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain blamed the Pakistani Taliban, noting the fundamentalist Islamic movement also had tried to kill a 14-year-old girl who is an advocate of education for girls and a critic of the Taliban. Malala Yousufzai was shot and wounded by a Taliban gunman in the Swat Valley on Tuesday.

The attack has drawn widespread condemnation.

Hussain urged the federal government to consider launching a “decisive operation against terrorists” to eliminate the militants.

“These Taliban have killed our innocent people in so many attacks. They are still killing our people. Instead of wasting time, we should hit them back, and we should do it as early as possible to save the precious lives of our innocent girls like Malala Yousufzai,” he told reporters in Peshawar.

Dawn.com’s correspondent Zahir Shah Sherazi also contributed to reporting from Peshawar.
 
The following article provides serious food for thought as to how Islamic terrorists should be tackled.

Terrorism and the TalibanFrom the Newspaper | Munir Akram

The cold-blooded shooting of Malala Yousufzai, the girls’ rights activist, by a Taliban hit man has led to an unusual outcry in Pakistan against this “bestial”, “obscene” and “horrendous” act of terrorism. This commendable popular revulsion, emanating from religious and political parties, as well as the military leadership, can crystallise effective action against the perpetrators of terrorist violence in Pakistan.

Some policy and administrative measures are self-evident. Gun control in Pakistan must be a high priority. All political parties and groups which maintain armed militias should be obliged to disband them. Security checks need to be intensified including the use of CCTV. The investigative and forensic capabilities of the security services need to be enhanced. Justice and penalties for terrorist attacks need to be dispensed boldly and quickly. And, Al Qaeda’s presence must be eliminated through decisive national and international action.

However, undertaking a comprehensive campaign against the terrorists will require not only political courage and unity within Pakistan’s disparate power structure but also a full understanding of the nature and causes of the terrorist threat which Pakistan confronts and which has apparently claimed over 36,000 Pakistani lives since the launch of the ‘war on terror’.

A plan of action against terrorist violence needs to start from a full analysis of the composition, motivation and modus operandi of the militant groups operating in Pakistan. This is a motley crowd. The generic word ‘Taliban’ is now an overextended brand name applied to a variety of groups within Afghanistan and Pakistan.

It is not possible, nor necessary, for Pakistan to fight all of those who are called, or call themselves, ‘Taliban’. All of them are not involved in attacks against Pakistan. Nor is it possible, as some have suggested, to negotiate peace with all of those called ‘Taliban’.

Most of the attacks in Pakistan have emanated from fighters grouped under the Al Qaeda-linked Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) — the so-called ‘Pakistani Taliban’, presently led by Hakeemullah Mehsud. The Mehsuds rose against the Pakistan Army after its first ingress into South Waziristan in 2003. Following the Red Mosque episode, the militant leader Baitullah Mehsud brought together a variety of Pakistani militant groups, including those operating in Swat as well as the so-called ‘Punjabi Taliban’, under the umbrella of the TTP.

These groups are united on one issue: opposition to Pakistan’s alliance with the US ‘war on terror’ (which they construe as a war on Islam). But each component group within the TTP also has its own specific objectives and priorities.

The Punjabi Taliban are largely hard-core Sunni groups with a sectarian agenda and an ideology similar to the ‘original’ Taliban led by Mullah Omar. These groups have been utilised by some of Pakistan’s leading political parties to play a pivotal role in south Punjab’s denominationally divided districts.

Some were involved in the Kashmiri freedom struggle. A few among them, working with Al Qaeda, twice attempted to assassinate former President Musharraf for his perceived ‘sellout’ of the Kashmiri freedom struggle after the December 2001 attack on the Indian parliament. However, the feared pro-Kashmiri Lashkar-e-Taiba did not join the anti-Pakistan attacks although, at US and Indian behest, it was eventually declared a terrorist organisation.

The approach to each of the groups within the TTP will need to be different. The Punjabi Taliban can be best controlled through political, security and judicial arrangements in the relevant districts. Promise of a share in electoral power but also demonstration of a determination to penalise illegal actions against Pakistan’s national interests could be elements designed to pacify these Punjabi groups. Their militancy may ease also with the US-Nato withdrawal from Afghanistan and an end to Pakistan’s cooperation with them.

It will be difficult to negotiate with the Taliban group which was operating in Swat and is probably responsible for shooting Malala Yousufzai. The last negotiations attempted with this group in 2009 — so mistakenly endorsed by Pakistan’s National Assembly — failed miserably. The media projection of their atrocities created the political environment that enabled the Pakistan Army to launch military operations in Swat and other frontier agencies. Interestingly, during these operations, the army found itself fighting highly trained Uzbek and Chechen fighters who could have come to Pakistan only through Afghanistan. They will have to be hunted down.

It will also be difficult to negotiate with the core of the TTP led by Hakeemullah Mehsud. At present, many TTP fighters operate from safe havens in Afghanistan against Pakistan Army positions. Pakistani intelligence has assumed for some time that these groups enjoy tacit support from Afghan intelligence if not the Kabul government.

These cross-border attacks against Pakistan from Afghan territory are likely to continue until a broader political arrangement is reached or the Pakistan Army takes action.

The military option against this core of the TTP can be accompanied by talks with the tribal leadership of the Mehsuds and other clans involved. This is probably what Imran Khan is advocating. A re-assumption of authority and power by the tribal maliks from the TTP warlords would help significantly in defeating these militant groups, restoring peace and halting terror attacks from Pakistan’s tribal agencies.

Much as the US and Nato would like Pakistan to undertake military action against the Haqqani group, Islamabad has no pressing reason to fight them or other Afghan Taliban. To do so will expand the number of groups targeting Pakistan. These groups are not involved presently in the attacks against Pakistan.

These Afghan Taliban are not only in North Waziristan; many are ‘hiding in plain sight’ with the two million Afghan refugees who populate virtual cities along the border in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Pakistan should help to contain and halt cross-border operations by the Afghan Taliban.

This can be best done in talks relating to the full and early withdrawal of all foreign forces from Afghanistan. In return, Pakistan should secure credible guarantees that Afghan, Indian and Western agencies are not involved in sponsoring terrorist violence within Pakistan, especially in Balochistan.

Pakistan should also be able to convince Washington that an attack on the Afghan Taliban at present makes little political sense.

The US wants to withdraw from Afghanistan in peace and dignity. This will be possible only if a cessation of hostilities is in effect, even if a political solution for Afghanistan’s future governance cannot be agreed by 2014. Pakistan can help to negotiate such an arrangement.

A US-Nato withdrawal from Afghanistan, and an end to Pakistan’s reluctant cooperation with them, will considerably ease the anger of the religious parties and other Pakistanis who oppose America’s objectives and presence in the region.

If Pakistan’s leadership can ensure that, following US withdrawal from Afghanistan, the much delayed investments in infrastructure, education and jobs are made in Pakistan’s urban and rural centres of poverty, especially the tribal agencies, the country can finally begin to address the root causes of extremism and militancy. This is the most sustainable way to consign terrorism to the dustbin of our history.

The writer is a former Pakistan ambassador to the UN.

Terrorism and the Taliban | DAWN.COM
 
Violence roundup: KMC director among 10 shot dead in city


By Our CorrespondentPublished: October 17, 2012

Police said that three men entered the 51-year-old director’s office on Jail Road and shot him at least five times. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI:
Around 10 people were gunned down in the city on Tuesday, including Karachi Metropolitan Corporation’s education director Mohammad Shamim Khan.
Police said that three men entered the 51-year-old director’s office on Jail Road and shot him at least five times. Khan was taken to the Aga Khan Hospital but could not survive his injuries. According to Jamshed Quarters SHO Khushnood Javed, Khan was arrested for fraud by NAB but was found not guilty.
A Pakistan Peoples Party leader Sajjad Balti, 40, was gunned down in Disalwa Town by men outside a mechanic shop. His body was taken to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital for an autopsy.
Mohammad Shafiq, an assistant-sub inspector who was posted at the North Nazimabad police station, was shot dead near Five Star Chowrangi. According to police, the victim was with his wife when he was shot multiple times.
Two young men were shot dead near Crown Cinema by four armed men. Their bodies were taken to the Civil Hospital, Karachi and later moved to the Edhi morgue for identification.
A 65-year-old man, Ahmed Ibrahim, was gunned down near Stadium Road by two armed men. The body of football player Javed Baloch, 55, was found from Bihar Colony. Docks police found the tortured body of a young man from Lyari River.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 17th, 2012.

Second KMC officer shot dead in 24 hours


By Our CorrespondentPublished: October 17, 2012

. PHOTO: FILETwo armed motorcyclists shot dead KMC inspector Shafqat Nasir, who was giving directions to sweepers to clean the roads in Shadman Town.


KARACHI: Another officer working for the city administration was shot dead on Wednesday in Karachi bringing the tally to two Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (KMC) officers who have been killed within 24 hours.
Two armed motorcyclists shot dead KMC inspector Shafqat Nasir, who was giving directions to sweepers to clean the roads in Shadman Town, said Shahrah-e-Noor Jahan police.
The father of three was affiliated with the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM). SHO Raja Tariq claimed that the victim may have been killed on ethnic basis.
Nasir was the third city administration official to have been killed since September 18 when KMC’s SITE Town assistant director education Moin Gham Pasar was killed in Pak Colony. On Tuesday, KMC director education Shamim Khan was gunned down inside his office at Jamshed Quarters.
In Orangi Town, a young man was shot dead by two unidentified attackers inside his automobile spare parts shop, Pirabad police said.
Ali Raza, 28, was apparently a victim of the recent wave of sectarian targeted killings as the police did not find any evidence of a robbery attempt or a personal enmity, said SHO Ashfaq Baloch.
Another activist of the MQM was found dead in Munnu Goth within the PIB Colony police remits. Bahadur Ali, 22, lived in Nishter Basti and had gone to visit her sister’s home on Wednesday night where he was kidnapped, said DSP Nasir Lodhi. The man was later killed and his body was dumped at an abandoned place. Ali was associated with at the MQM’s unit 58 and worked as a loader at a plastic factory, the police officer added.
On Manghopir Road, four armed men on two motorcycles fired a volley of bullets at a bus carrying workers of a ceramics company. At least two men were injured in the attack, Manghopir police said.
Unconfirmed reports suggested that a militant group had demanded Rs20 million as extortion from the company’s administration and attacked the bus on being refused.
After the incident, Manghopir SHO Shams Zaman was suspended and Nasir Mehmood was appointed in his place.
 
why not just declare emergency law in the troubles areas instead of allowing body bags to pile everyday?

what is the local govt. even doing in Karachi to end the scourge of targeted killings that we read about almost every day
 
Cycle bomb, attack kills 4 FC men
By: Bari Baloch | October 20, 2012


QUETTA - Three Frontier Corps (FC) men were killed and 10 others wounded in a bomb attack in Quetta, claimed by the banned Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), on the outskirts of Quetta on Friday. Another FC?soldier was killed in an attack in Dera Bugti.
An FC spokesman said explosive material fitted to a bicycle parked along the roadside near Badini intersection was detonated when a patrol passed by, killing three security men and wounding 10 others. Six civilians, including a woman, were among the injured, rescuers said.
Lawmen rushed to the site and cordoned off the area. The rescuers shifted the dead and injured to the Civil Hospital and CM Hospital. The deceased were identified as Nawab Khan, Sarmad and Wajid Khan, while two injured security personnel were named as Sajjad Ahmed and Feroz Ahmed.
DIG (Investigation) Hamid Shakeel told the media that four security men and six civilians, including a woman, were among the wounded. “The FC convoy was the main target,” he added. According to sources in the bomb disposal squad, it was a remote-controlled blast and up to 15-kg explosive material was used while the FC vehicle was without a jammer.
Calling from unspecified location, BLA spokesman Jehand Baloch claimed responsibility for the attack, saying: “Eight FC personnel were killed and several others wounded.” The BLA spokesman asked civilians to stay away from security forces. The explosion triggered panic among the residents who started running helter-skelter. Police have launched a hunt for the culprits. However, no arrest was made till filing of this report.
Meanwhile, a Frontier Corps constable was killed and five others were wounded when armed men attacked a check post in restive Dera Bugti district on Friday, while a man was shot dead in Khuzdar.
Unidentified gunmen attacked a security forces check post in Dasht Goran area, killing a soldier and leaving five others wounded. The assailants fled from the scene when security personnel returned fire.
Dera Bugti Tehsildar Baharm Bugti confirmed the incident, saying one security personnel killed and five other wounded.
Security personnel guarded the site after the incident and shifted the deceased and injured personnel to the hospital before starting a search operation in the area to track down the attackers.
In another incident, unidentified armed men shot a man dead in Kattan area of Khuzdar district. The deceased is said to be a prayer leader of a local mosque.

Cycle bomb, attack kills 4 FC men | The Nation
 
why not just declare emergency law in the troubles areas instead of allowing body bags to pile everyday?

what is the local govt. even doing in Karachi to end the scourge of targeted killings that we read about almost every day

Politics.... .. PML N will never let them declare emergency just for its vote bank.
 
Militants retaliate: IED blast kills three, injures six

HANGU / JAMRUD: Three people were killed and another six were injured when an improvised explosive device (IED) planted by a roadside in Zeridar area of Lower Orakzai Agency exploded on Friday.
An official of the political administration said that around 1:30pm an IED exploded near a passenger pickup van loaded with passengers en route to Dourhanki from Kohat.
According to the official, the injured were taken to the Kohat Divisional Hospital, adding that all the passengers were from Mani Khel tribe in the agency. The deceased have been identified as Liaqat Ali, Umar Ali and Ghafoor Hussain. Zafar Ali, Noor Taj Ali, Gulshan Ali, Naib Ali and Kamal Hussain are among the injured.
Meanwhile, in another incident in Shamshadin area on the boundary of the troubled agency and Hangu district, a stray rocket landed on a house, severely injuring a woman, according to the political administration officer. “Both militants and security forces were exchanging gunfire at intervals in the area,” he said. The official added that during the exchange of fire, rockets fired from an unknown direction landed on the house of Abdul Waris, injuring his wife. Two other houses belonging to Jalat Khan and Rashid were also destroyed.
Two Afghans injured
A mortar shell fired from an unknown direction landed on the house of an Afghan refugee, Atiqur Rehman, in Ghariza area of tehsil Jamrud in Khyber Agency. Rehman’s parents were injured in the incident.

Militants retaliate: IED blast kills three, injures six – The Express Tribune
 
Twin blasts in Swabi: K-P chief minister’s convoy escapes bomb attack

SWABI:
Eight people, including police personnel, were injured in two explosions in Swabi district on Monday.

An official of the district police said Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) Chief Minister Ameer Haider Khan Hoti’s motorcade was passing through Mall Road, a kilometre away from the city of Swabi, to inaugurate the Swabi-Jehangira Road, when a stationary motorcycle exploded moments after the convoy sped past.

The official said that around one kilogramme of explosives were used in the blast. No casualty or injury was reported in the attack.

He added that three hours after the chief minister left the district, another remote-controlled bomb exploded in the Shewa Adda area, around 15 kilometres north of Swabi.

Eight people, including two policemen, were injured in the blast.

Kalu Khan police Station House Officer (SHO) Fayaz Khan said that unidentified men planted a bomb to a bicycle and parked it near a shop in Shewa Adda.

He said the bomb exploded around 4pm in a usually crowded area of Shewa Adda, adding that a police inspector and a constable along with six civilians were injured in the blast.

Khan said the shop was completely gutted in the incident, adding that police personnel rushed to the site of the blast and cordoned off the area.

The injured, including inspector Murad Khan and constable Waris Khan, were taken to Civil Hospital Kalu Khan, from where they were shifted to Mardan District Headquarters Hospital.

The injured were identified as Shad Ali, Khurshid, Iqbal Hussain, Rasheed Bahadur, Yasin and Saddiq. The SHO also said that a large number of people visited the hospital, including local political leaders and activists.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 23rd, 2012.

Twin blasts in Swabi: K-P chief minister
 
This article was in first page of TOIlet which many Pakistanis and chinese posters dont believe. So the above news is probably false or highly exagerrated.

Secondly, When I saw news in morning, I thought only two desperate posters will post it in PDF, one is ajtr and another is windjammer. So you proved me right.

Wonder who is desperate to post on any incident relating Pakistan.....tall talk....no morals. !!
 
Three killed as shells hit houses in Miranshah
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INP 3 hrs ago
MIRANSHAH - At least three persons including woman and children were killed and nine others injured on late Monday night when mortar shells fell on houses in North Waziristan agency.
According to Security sources, the casualties took place in Miranshah, the headquarters of North Waziristan, where terrorists attacked a check post.
Officials said security forces retaliated against the militant attack during which few mortar shell landed on nearby houses, killing three people and injuring nine others, including women and children.
Local people and army troops moved the injured to Miranshah headquarters hospital for treatment, sources said.

Source:pakistantoday.com.pk

At least two Shia Muslims have been shot dead by unknown gunmen in Pakistan's southern port city of Karachi in the latest wave of attacks on the Shia community in the country, Press TV reports.


The late Monday attack follows a similar incident in the eastern city of Lahore where gunmen killed a senior Shia lawyer.

Shakir Ali Rizvi was gunned down on Friday while he was on his way to Lahore’s High Court.

Lawyers in Lahore have announced they would boycott courts on Friday in protest against the recent killings of Shia lawyers.

On October 12, another Shia Lawyer, Mirza Waqar Hussain, was targeted in the southern port city of Karachi and later died of his gunshot wounds.

Over the past months, pro-Taliban militants have killed hundreds of Shia Muslims in various parts of Pakistan.

The country’s Shia leaders have called on the government to form a judicial commission to investigate the bloodshed.

The killing of Shias has caused an international outrage, with rights groups and regional countries expressing concern over the ongoing deadly violence.

Human Rights Watch issued a statement in September asking the Pakistani government to “urgently act” to protect the Shia Muslims in Pakistan.

DB/JR
 
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