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Pakistan bomb kills anti-Taliban mayor, 11 others (UPDATE)

Other News Materials 8 November 2009 21:57 (UTC +04:00)
A suicide bomber blew himself up Sunday in market in Pakistan's northwest crowded with shoppers ahead of a Muslim holiday, killing 12 people, including a mayor who once supported but had turned against the Taliban, officials said.
Pakistan bomb kills anti-Taliban mayor, 11 others (UPDATE)

A suicide bomber blew himself up Sunday in market in Pakistan's northwest crowded with shoppers ahead of a Muslim holiday, killing 12 people, including a mayor who once supported but had turned against the Taliban, officials said, AP reported.

A purported commander for the militant group claimed responsibility for the bombing, saying the official was targeted for "interfering in our matters."

The bombing, in the town of Adazai, about 10 miles (16 kilometers) south of the main northwestern city of Peshawar, underscores the difficulty of combatting militancy in Pakistan, where the Taliban have carried out a series of attacks in recent weeks. The militants have said the assaults are meant to avenge a government offensive in South Waziristan, the main Taliban and al-Qaida sanctuary in the country - and they risk shaking the Islamabad's resolve.

The suicide bomber hit as shoppers thronged a market where goats were being sold to celebrate the upcoming Muslim festival of Eid, killing the Adazi mayor, Abdul Malik, and 11 other people, including a young girl, said Sahibzada Anis, the top official in Peshawar.

Khan Zamir was buying goats when the explosion ripped through the street.

"That place turned into hell where the dead and injured were lying everywhere, and blood and flesh were spread around," he said, adding that two of his relatives were badly wounded.

"Now we have our blood in this war," he said, vowing revenge against the attackers.

Twenty-five wounded people - several in critical condition - were rushed to a hospital, police officer Abdul Sattar Khan said.

Malik, who had once been a Taliban supporter, later switched sides and formed a local militia to help fight the militants.

"Malik had survived several attacks on his life in the recent past, since he turned against the militants," Anis said. "But today the militants have finally killed him."

"Our local fighters carried out this attack," the purported Taliban commander, who gave only one name, Omar, said by telephone from an undisclosed location. "He had set up a militia. He was supporting killings of our men. He was interfering in our matters." Omar, whose identity could not be confirmed, threatened to kill anyone who tried to create an anti-Taliban militia.

Foreign Minister Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi condemned the suicide blast, calling the attackers "enemies of Islam" in a statement. "Killing innocent people has no justification whatsoever," he said.

Militants have struck repeatedly in Pakistan in recent weeks, killing more than 300 civilians and soldiers in attacks aimed at weakening the government's resolve to continue the South Waziristan operation.

Pakistani troops have fought gunbattles in and around key Taliban towns in the region for several days. The latest fighting Sunday in the Taliban heartland killed 20 militants and wounded eight soldiers, an army statement said.

Ten militants and two soldiers were also killed Sunday after a group of militants attacked a security checkpoint in the Mohmand tribal region, an army official said. The official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the attack, said the militants fired on a Frontier Corps checkpoint with rockets and assault rifles but were repelled by government forces.

The military says hundreds of militants have been killed in the fighting in South Waziristan - a claim the Taliban dismisses. The area is sealed, and the figures are impossible to verify.

About 350,000 people have fled the fighting.

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