PESHAWAR, Pakistan - A suicide bomber trying to assassinate Pakistan's
interior minister detonated his explosives in a crowd surrounding the official
Saturday, killing 22 people and wounding 35.
Pakistan's Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao talks to
reporters as he leave after attend a ceremony in this July 30, 2005 file
photo in Karachi, Pakistan. [AP]
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Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao was slightly injured, and state
television showed him walking to his car after the blast with bloodstains on his
face and white tunic. His son, two security guards and two members of his staff
were among the injured.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the bombing, but suspicion
will fall on Islamic militants who have repeatedly targeted top Pakistani
officials, including President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, for support of the US-led
war on terror.
The suicide bomber struck soon after Sherpao had finished addressing a
political gathering attended by hundreds of people in an open field in the
northwestern town of Charsadda.
A local journalist who was covering the event said the attacker got within 15
yards of Sherpao, detonating the bomb in a crowd that had gathered around the
minister as he was about to get into his car.
The bombing left a carnage of limbs and body parts and triggered a stampede,
said Faiz Mohammed.
"When the dust settled, I saw my clothes were stained with human brain, flesh
and blood," said Mohammed, who suffered a slight leg injury.
Women wailed over the dead body of a child, covered in a blue sheet.
Investigators found the bomber's head, according to an intelligence official
who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitive nature of his job.
Sherpao, who was taken to a hospital but quickly discharged, told reporters
he was the target of the suicide attack.
He expressed sorrow over the loss of life, but said he would continue to
fight terrorism. "Such attacks cannot deter my resolve in the fight against
terrorism," he said.
White House spokesman Tony Fratto said the attack underscored the urgency of
the struggle against terrorism.
"It shows terrorists are out there and active ... It's a determined enemy out
there that wants to cause destruction, and our determination needs to exceed
theirs," Fratto said.
An intelligence official said security guards blocked the attacker as he
tried to get close to Sherpao, though witnesses did not verify that account.
Asif Iqbal Daudzai, spokesman for the government of North West Frontier
Province, said the attack killed 22 people and wounded 35, but Mohammed, the
local journalist, estimated about 50 were injured.
Sherpao's son, Sikandar Khan, several lawmakers and security officials were
among the injured, said police official Mohammed Khan.
The bombing came a day after an apparent missile strike killed four people in
the border region of North Waziristan, considered a stronghold of Taliban and
al-Qaida militants. The U.S. military and NATO in neighboring Afghanistan denied
any involvement.
It wasn't clear if Pakistani security forces played any role. The government
claimed - despite witness accounts to the contrary - that the dead and wounded
were making bombs and had accidentally caused an explosion.
Saturday's blast was the latest in a series of bombings that have targeted
top officials since Pakistan became a Washington ally against al-Qaida after the
Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks.
In December 2003, Musharraf narrowly escaped injury in two massive bombings
11 days apart in the garrison city of Rawalpindi. Seventeen people were killed
in the second bombing.
In July 2004, a suicide bombing claimed by al-Qaida targeted Prime Minister
Shaukat Aziz as he campaigned west of Islamabad, a few weeks before he took
office. Aziz was unhurt, but nine others, including his driver, were
killed.