Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

Pakistan (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead, and the toll rose on Saturday as rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office. There were mixed reports that a car bomb was the source of a possible second blast.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilize neighboring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

Troops killed 20 militants in an overnight clash in South Waziristan after insurgents attacked a military checkpost in their previous stronghold of Makeen, intelligence officials said. There was no independent confirmation of the casualties.

Despite losing ground in military offensives, militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

While praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident in Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants attacked a bus carrying Pakistani Shi’a tribesmen traveling from the Kurram tribal region and heading to Peshawar via Afghanistan, killing 11 and wounding one, residents and government officials said.

Pakistani tribesmen take a circuitous route through Afghanistan to travel between Kurram and Peshawar as the road linking the two regions is often closed because of militants and Pakistani Army operations.

(Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jeremy Laurence)

Death toll from Pakistan bomb attack reaches 102

PESHAWAR, Pakistan, July 10 (Reuters) – The death toll from a suicide attack in a volatile border region of Pakistan climbed to 102 on Saturday, showing the militants’ continued ability to stage deadly strikes despite losing ground in army offensives.

The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), or Taliban Movement of Pakistan, claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack in Mohmand, a Pashtun region on the northwestern border with Afghanistan, where security forces have stepped up operations against militants in recent months.

Friday’s attack is the deadliest Pakistan has suffered since an attack on a market in Peshawar in October last year that killed 105.

Five children, aged 5 to 10, and several women were among the dead, and the toll rose on Saturday as rescuers working throughout the night found more bodies in the rubble.

“We have recovered more bodies from the debris of dozens of shops that were razed to the ground by the blast and the number of dead has increased” to 102, said Rasool Khan, assistant political agent of Mohmand.

The bomber blew himself up outside Khan’s office. There were mixed reports that a car bomb was the source of a possible second blast.

Late on Friday, a TTP spokesman in Mohmand who identified himself as Ikramullah Mohmand, said anti-Taliban tribal elders from various peace committees who had come to Khan’s office were the target.

A senior elder and two others were killed in the attack.

Among nearly 80 wounded were several people displaced by fighting between security forces and militants, who were collecting relief goods near the blast side.

The latest militant attack underscored multiple security challenges facing nuclear-armed U.S. ally Pakistan, whose support is vital in attempts to stabilise neighbouring Afghanistan, where U.S.-led NATO troops are fighting a raging Taliban insurgency.

The military has made progress over the past year when they pushed militants out of the Swat valley, northwest of Islamabad. In October the army began an offensive in the militants’ South Waziristan bastion on the Afghan border.

The offensive was extended to Orakzai in March as many of the militants who fled the South Waziristan operation took refuge there and in Mohmand. Hundreds of militants have since been killed in air strikes in the two regions.

Troops killed 20 militants in an overnight clash in South Waziristan after insurgents attacked a military checkpost in their previous stronghold of Makeen, intelligence officials said. There was no independent confirmation of the casualties.

Despite losing ground in military offensives, militants have proven their ability to bounce back, responding with a barrage of bomb attacks in towns and cities, killing hundreds of people.

Two suicide bombers killed at least 42 people in an attack on Pakistan’s most important Sufi shrine in the eastern city of Lahore last week.

While praising Pakistan’s efforts to fight homegrown militants, the unabated violence is a source of worry for the United States, which also wants Islamabad to go after Afghan militants who cross the border to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

In a separate incident in Afghanistan, suspected Taliban militants attacked a bus carrying Pakistani Shi’a tribesmen travelling from the Kurram tribal region and heading to Peshawar via Afghanistan, killing 11 and wounding one, residents and government officials said.

Pakistani tribesmen take a circuitous route through Afghanistan to travel between Kurram and Peshawar as the road linking the two regions is often closed because of militants and Pakistani Army operations. [ID:nSGE669GBL]

(Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Jeremy Laurence) (E-mail: augustine.anthony@thomsonreuters.com; Reuters Messaging: augustine.anthony.reuters.com@reuters.net; Islamabad newsroom: +92 51 281 0017)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Stray NATO artillery kills six Afghan civilians

KABUL, July 10 (Reuters) – Foreign troops in Afghanistan killed six civilians and wounded several others with stray artillery fire just a day after a NATO airstrike accidently killed five Afghan government soldiers.

A joint Afghan and NATO investigation team found the civilians died on Thursday when artillery fire failed to hit a target in the Jani Khel district of Paktia Province, the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said in a statement.

“ISAF officials offer sincere condolences to those affected and accept full responsibility for the actions that led to this tragic incident,” the statement, received late on Friday, said.

The country’s interior ministry initially blamed the deaths on a rocket fired by insurgents hitting a local bazaar.

Civilian casualties and friendly fire deaths among Afghan security forces have been a frequent irritant between President Hamid Karzai and Western military forces during the nine-year war since the ousting of the Taliban in 2001.

ISAF said commanders had held two days of meetings, or “shuras”, with local elders in Jani Khel to discuss the incident.

New U.S. and NATO forces commander General David Petraeus is considering a change to rules of engagement drawn up his predecessor to avoid civilian casualties, following complaints they tie the hands of coalition troops combating insurgents.

Casualties among NATO forces fighting in Afghanistan hit a record high in June and commanders expect violence to rise in parallel with an anti-insurgent offensive in coming months, raising questions about whether more can be done to protect troops.

Two coalition soldiers were killed on Friday in separate bomb attacks, the alliance said, while a suicide car bomb hit a NATO convoy on a bridge outside Jalalabad, killing one civilian and wounding nine others.

Five Afghan government soldiers were accidently killed and two others wounded in a pre-dawn NATO helicopter airstrike on Wednesday, prompting condemnation from the country’s government.

The attack took place after a aircraft mistook Afghan National Army soldiers for Taliban insurgents during an operation in southwest Ghazni. (Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

Restive Iraq provinces defy US withdrawal timeline

JALAWLA, Iraq, July 5 (Reuters) – It was a tip-off about a weapons cache that drew the U.S. soldiers of Charlie Troop away from their Stryker armoured vehicles in the densely populated Iraqi town of Jalawla one Friday morning last month.

That was when the suicide bomber struck, detonating a car bomb so “catastrophic” that details of the attack that killed Sergeant Israel O’Bryan and Specialist William Yauch are still hazy, their commanding officer said.

One thing was clear: the insurgency in Jalawla won’t lie down.

Like other towns across Iraq’s restive northern provinces of Diyala, Kirkuk and Nineveh, Jalawla defies the U.S. narrative of an end to combat operations next month under a plan to pull out of Iraq completely by the end of 2011.

“I would say we’re pretty far from rolling up the insurgency in Jalawla,” said Charlie Troop commander Captain Mark Adams of the 1st Squadron, 14th U.S. Cavalry. “I don’t feel we’ve made a whole lot of progress there.”

For the ethnically and religiously-mixed arc running from Jalawla near Iraq’s eastern border with Iran to the western frontier with Syria, the transition on Aug. 31 is less a milestone than a matter of semantics.

Operations that to outsiders will look pretty much like combat will continue in areas where a stubborn Sunni Islamist insurgency remains entrenched, despite a sharp fall in overall violence since the height of the sectarian slaughter in 2006/07.

They will, however, be called “stability operations”, loosely defined as advising, assisting, training and equipping Iraqi forces — a role U.S. forces have had for some time.

U.S. troops will “continue to conduct partnered counter terrorism operations to maintain pressure on extremist terrorist networks,” said chief spokesman Major General Stephen Lanza.

U.S. troop numbers will fall to 50,000 on Sept. 1 from around 77,000 now. Bases are closing, hardware going to Afghanistan and units flying home without replacement.

In disputed territories adjacent to Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdistan region, where Arabs and Kurds wrestle over land and power, insurgent cells have regrouped after being driven out of much of Iraq’s Sunni heartland.

Here, U.S. soldiers will still occasionally shoot, and be shot at after Sept. 1.

Al Qaeda “is down but not out,” said U.S. forces Division North commander Major General Tony Cucolo. “We take down a cell, but on a smaller, less capable level it re-forms.”

The threat “can’t be handled” by Iraqi Security Forces “as they are”, he said on a Blackhawk helicopter flight over Diyala.

PLAYING SECOND FIDDLE

The response to the Jalawla attack on June 11 provides a snapshot of the challenges and frustrations that confront U.S. forces often playing second fiddle to their Iraqi counterparts.

While U.S. special forces successfully hunted down at least one suspected insurgent, Iraqi police failed to turn up for a 6 a.m. (0300 GMT) roadside rendezvous on the last day of a two-week search operation across Jalawla.

They began without U.S. support and found nothing.

“We’re supposed to clear the whole town, but they never find anything,” said Lieutenant Jan Dudzinski, 26, seeking shade in the desert as his platoon provided a “cordon” for the operation named Jalawla Peacemaker. Trust between the two forces is low.

“The planning, the way they do it, doesn’t work,” said Sergeant Jeremy Hare, a 32-year-old veteran of four Iraq tours. “They get bored of it and don’t clear as well.”

As other bases close, Forward Operating Base Cobra in Diyala will remain at the same strength beyond Sept 1.

U.S. soldiers will continue to man checkpoints with Iraqi army and Kurdish Peshmerga forces, an exercise in cooperation which some observers say might not survive a U.S. departure.

A recent spike in violence, with mortar rounds lobbed at FOB Cobra and nearby Checkpoint Three, had reinforced the need for a robust U.S. presence, said Major Robert Halvorson, who drafted the military’s report into the Jalawla attack.

The insurgents were perhaps trying to exploit a political paralysis in the capital, where Sunni, Shi’ite and Kurdish political factions have yet to form a government almost four months after an election, officers said.

“By all their activity here they’re actually drawing us here,” said Halvorson, “and this is where we’re going to fight them so people don’t have to fight them in Baghdad.” (Editing by Michael Christie and Samia Nakhoul)

Trade Bank of Iraq targeted in Baghdad blastsTrade Bank of Iraq targeted in Baghdad blasts

June 20 (Reuters) – Twin car bomb blasts in Baghdad on Sunday targeted the headquarters of the Trade Bank of Iraq, one of the public sector’s most active financial institutions, and killed 18 people, a government official said.

Baghdad security spokesman Major General Qassim al-Moussawi said 42 people were injured in the bombings. (Reporting by Muhanad Mohammed; Editing by Matthew Jones)

U.S. showed Pakistan evidence on militant faction

(Reuters) – The United States has presented evidence to Pakistan about the growing threat and reach of a militant faction which Washington suspects has ties to Pakistani intelligence, U.S. officials said on Wednesday.

World

In the presentations, U.S. military leaders provided Pakistan’s army chief with information detailing the role of the Haqqani network in a string of increasingly brazen bombings, including one last month targeting the main NATO air base at Bagram in Afghanistan.

Washington has long pressed Islamabad to crack down on the Haqqanis in the North Waziristan tribal zone bordering Afghanistan, who are closely aligned with the Taliban, but U.S. officials acknowledge it is a hard sell because of resistance within Pakistani intelligence.

General David Petraeus, who oversees the Afghan war as head of U.S. Central Command, told a congressional hearing the Haqqanis had “transnational” ambitions, suggesting they could try to strike beyond Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Washington has issued similar warnings about the growing reach of the Pakistani Taliban, which investigators blame for a botched May 1 car bomb in New York’s Time Square.

There are strategic reasons for Pakistan’s hesitancy to attack the Haqqanis, a faction which some in Islamabad see as a strategic asset that will give them influence in any eventual settlement to the war in neighboring Afghanistan.

One U.S. official said “some elements” of Pakistani intelligence, but far from all, still support the Haqqanis.

Without mentioning the Haqqanis by name, Petraeus acknowledged long-standing ties between Islamabad and what he called “bad guys,” suggesting the relationships were useful to gather intelligence on the groups.

But he voiced confidence Pakistanis understood that “you cannot allow poisonous snakes to have a nest in your backyard, even if the tacid agreement is that they’re going to bite the neighbors kids instead of yours.”

“Eventually,” Petraeus said, “they turn around and bite you and your kids.”

Pakistan has denied a report by the London School of Economics that alleges enduring ties between its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency and the Afghan Taliban.

PAKISTAN INTELLIGENCE ROLE

The report said the agency not only funds and trains Taliban fighters in Afghanistan but is officially represented on the movement’s leadership council, giving it significant influence over operations.

Petraeus said there was “no question” Pakistan has maintained “a variety of relationships,” in some cases dating back decades, to groups which, with U.S. support, battled the Soviets when they occupied Afghanistan.

“Some of those ties continue in various forms, some of them, by the way, gathering intelligence,” he said.

“You have to have contact with bad guys to get intelligence on bad guys.”

Some of the groups in question, including the Haqqani network, are now leading the fight against Western forces.

The Pentagon has expressed confidence that Pakistan will eventually mount an offensive in North Waziristan, but has acknowledged the country’s armed forces were already stretched by operations in other tribal areas.

“The problem has been one of capacity. And again, we’re working hard to enable that capacity,” Petraeus said.

Petraeus, General Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, discussed Haqqani’s alleged role in the bombings in a recent meeting with Pakistan’s army chief Ashfaq Kayani.

“We have shared information with him about links of the leadership of the Haqqani network … that clearly commanded and controlled the operation against Bagram air base and the attack in Kabul, among others,” Petraeus said.

Suicide bombers carrying rockets and grenades launched a brazen predawn attack on the base on May 19, killing an American contractor and wounding nine U.S. troops. About a dozen militants, many wearing suicide vests packed with explosives, were killed, the Pentagon said at the time.

A day earlier, a suicide bomber attacked a military convoy in Kabul, killing 12 Afghan civilians and six foreign troops.

Bagram is the main base for U.S.-led troops in Afghanistan, with the largest airfield in the country. It was used by the former Soviet Union during its invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s.

(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart; editing by Todd Eastham)

Suicide car bomb kills 4 in Iraq’s Diyala

June 11 (Reuters) – A suicide car bomb targeting a U.S. military patrol in Iraq’s eastern Diyala province on Friday killed at least four people and wounded 26, a police source said.

The U.S. military did not immediately respond to requests for confirmation of U.S. casualties.

The police source said four Iraqi policemen were killed when a car packed with explosives detonated alongside the U.S. vehicles and an Iraqi police patrol near a market in the town of Jalawla, 115 km (70 miles) northeast of Baghdad.

Overall violence in Iraq has dropped sharply since the height of sectarian warfare in 2006-07, but an inconclusive March parliamentary election has fuelled a spike in bloodshed over the past two months.

In Baghdad on Friday, a roadside bomb killed two civilians and wounded nine others in the southern Doura district, police said. A car bomb in the capital late on Thursday killed four people and wounded 10.

U.S. forces have pulled out of Iraqi cities and are working to formally end combat operations by Sept. 1, cutting the U.S. military force from just under 90,000 to 50,000.

But U.S. military vehicles have been targeted on several occasions in recent days, without U.S. casualties.

On Wednesday, two civilians died when a suicide bomber on a motorcycle rammed into a U.S. army patrol near the small town of Muqdadiya, 80 km (50 miles) northeast of Baghdad. (Reporting by Muhanad Mohammed; Writing by Matt Robinson; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Two men with militant ties arrested in NY – report

Two men were arrested late Saturday at John F. Kennedy International Airport where they were believed headed for meetings with militant groups in Somalia, The New Jersey Star Ledger reported.

The men were arrested as they tried to board flights to Egypt. They were charged with conspiring to commit an act of international terrorism through a group tied to al Qaeda, the newspaper said, citing officials familiar with the arrests.

Both in their twenties and both residents of New Jersey, the two men had been under investigation since October 2006, the Star Ledger said.

An unidentified official told the newspaper both men were unmarried American citizens.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office confirmed the arrests but said the pair did not pose any immediate threat. They are scheduled to appear on Monday in U.S. District Court in Newark, New Jersey.

Federal and local law enforcement officials searched the homes of both men where they conducted interviews and removed boxes of papers, a computer and other materials.

Authorities had infiltrated the men’s social circle and said the suspects were not planning an imminent attack in the New York-New Jersey area but were believed to be intending to join with the Al Shabaab youth movement to fight against Americans in Somalia, the report said.

One official briefed on the case was hopeful it would lead to a “web of arrests,” the newspaper said.

The arrests followed a failed attempt to explode a car bomb in New York’s Times Square last month and an incident on Christmas Day in which a 23-year-old Nigerian tried to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner by setting off explosives hidden in his underwear. (Reporting by Chris Michaud; editing by Chris Wilson)

Post foiled Times Square bomb plot, US deployed Fed agents to prevent future attacks

New York, May 21 (ANI): American prosecutors have revealed that hundreds of federal agents were deployed in different cities of the country to prevent future attacks, days after the arrest of Faisal Shahzad, the naturalized U.S. citizen of Pakistan origin for leaving a car bomb near Times Square.

The May 12 letter, which was partially redacted and addressed to Loretta A. Preska, the chief judge of United States District Court in Manhattan, and George A. Yanthis, the magistrate judge assigned to the case, sheds new light on the actions of the federal authorities after the May 3 arrest of Shahzad, the New York Times reports.

“Since his arrest,” the letter says, “the defendant has been questioned — and continues to be questioned — by federal agents on a number of sensitive national security and law enforcement matters for the purpose of preventing potential future attacks, identifying associates of the defendant and possible facilitators of the attempted attack, as well as gathering other actionable intelligence,” the letter states.

The next section of the letter gives detailed information provided by Shahzad to the agents questioning him.

The prosecutors — Brendan R. McGuire, Jeffrey A. Brown, John P. Cronan and Randall W. Jackson, who are assistant United States attorneys — then wrote: “Federal law enforcement agents are vigorously and expeditiously pursuing leads relating to this and other information provided by the defendant, a process which has required the participation of hundreds of agents in different cities working around the clock since the defendant’s arrest.”

The Obama administration has said the failed attack was aided and directed by the Pakistani Taliban.

In the letter unsealed in federal court in Manhattan, the prosecutors said they were writing to advise the judges about “the status of the proceedings” against Shahzad.

They said that they saw “no legal requirement to report to the court on the status of the defendant’s detention,” but that “under the unusual circumstances of this case, and in deference to the court’s ultimate supervisory authority, a report on the status of the case serves the interest of justice.” (ANI)

Times Square bomber still confused about why car bomb failed to explode

New York, May 20 (ANI): Bewildered Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad still has no idea why the SUV that he loaded with explosives failed to blow up.

According to the New York Post, Shahzad repeatedly asked federal investigators in a hotel room why the bomb he built failed to go off.

Aside from wanting to target other New York landmarks, a person familiar with the case said that during more than two weeks of questioning, Shahzad expressed surprise the device — comprised up of fireworks, gasoline canisters, propane tanks and fertilizer — did not explode on May 1.

Experts said the bomb had been poorly constructed with a nest of wires, battery-operated alarm clocks and heavy bags of fertilizer that couldn’t explode.

The suspect said he thought the fireworks, which he purchased from a store in Pennsylvania, would trigger a chain-reaction that would rupture the tanks and create a deadly fireball.

Instead, the concoction created a lot of smoke, catching the attention of two eagle-eyed street vendors who alerted police.

Shahzad left the vehicle on West 45th Street amid hundreds of people enjoying the tourist haven.

The attempted bombing prompted a massive police response, but no one was hurt.

Shahzad had also considered attacking Grand Central Terminal, Rockefeller Center, the World Financial Center near Ground Zero and Sikorsky Inc., a defense contractor with an office in his Connecticut hometown.

Shahzad appeared in Manhattan federal court on Tuesday for the first time since his May 3 arrest.

He is being held without bail on five felony charges including attempted use of weapons of mass destruction and attempted acts of terrorism transcending national boundaries, each of which carry potential penalties of life in prison. (ANI)

Holder vows to pursue Times Square suspects abroad

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has told a House panel that the Obama administration would use all available resources to bring all those involved in the failed Times Square bombing plot to justice, whether they are in the United States or overseas.

“We now believe that the Pakistan Taliban was responsible for this attempted attack. We are currently working with the authorities in Pakistan on this investigation, and we will use every available resource to make sure that anyone found responsible — whether they be in the United States or overseas, the Washington Post quoted Holder as telling the House Judiciary Committee on Thursday.

Holder”s testimony came as federal agents executed new search warrants in the Northeast in connection with the car bomb plot and took at least three people into custody.

The plot failed when the explosives did not detonate and bystanders alerted police to a fire in a parked SUV.

The FBI said agents were searching locations in the Boston area, New York and New Jersey for evidence related to the Times Square investigation.

Holder told the House Judiciary Committee that “several individuals encountered during those searches” have been taken into federal custody for alleged immigration violations. He did not immediately provide further details of the arrests.

Faisal Shahzad, 30, a naturalized U.S. citizen originally from Pakistan, has been charged with attempting to detonate a homemade bomb in the back of his SUV on a busy Saturday night in Times Square.

An FBI complaint said he admitted his role in the attempted attack and said he had received bomb-making training in a rugged tribal area of his native Pakistan that harbors Taliban and al-Qaeda militants.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the failed bombing and vowed to carry out other attacks in the United States.

Investigators are looking into possible links between Shahzad and the Pakistani Taliban and another militant group. (ANI)

Iraq blames deadly attacks on Al Qaeda

The continuing political deadlock in Iraq appears to have inspired another mass bombing campaign that has left about 100 people dead and scores more injured.

Militant groups staged a series of explosions and shootings across the country, targeting both security forces and civilians.

The government has blamed militants linked to Al Qaeda.

It is the most deadly attack in Iraq this year and comes two months after an inconclusive election that has still produced no clear winner.

Iraqis had hoped that national elections in March might have brought an end to such bombings.

Security was the number one electoral issue and both sides were promising tougher measures to crack down on insurgents who have staged mass attacks in the past.

But it was not to be. A series of suicide bombings and drive-by shootings ripped through areas of Baghdad and other towns including Mosul and the central city of Hilla, leaving scores dead and many more wounded.

“We are workers who work to earn a living,” said one Iraqi man.

“Why do those people have to be killed like this? Three blasts in Iskandariya, Haswa and Musayyib. Bodies of people were scattered everywhere.”

The violence began with a series of co-ordinated shootings against police and army checkpoints. Two car bombs then exploded outside a textile factory just as workers were preparing to go home for lunch.

As rescue workers and bystanders gathered at the scene, a suicide bomber blew himself up.

“We heard a bomb explosion and we rushed to the site,” said one observer.

“As we were running towards the site, a car bomb went off by a group of people who had been gathering there. Is this acceptable to God?”

Another bomb exploded in a marketplace killing at least 15 people.

All up there were more than 20 attacks across the country.

Only last month the United States and Iraqi officials had claimed victory in killing two of Al Qaeda’s most senior members, but the Iraqi government now fears the extremist group is stepping up its attacks to exploit the political instability.

More than two months after the March 7 elections it is still not clear who will control the next Iraqi government and US Major General Stephen Lanza says government forces were the key target in the bombings.

“The majority of the attacks were directed against the ISF (Iraq security forces), some at checkpoints and some on houses, such as the attacks in Fallujah,” he said.

“We do not have additional details on that yet, but we continue to do our assessment and analysis as the facts continue to develop.”

In recent days, electoral officials have begun ratifying the results from all provinces – except Baghdad, where a recount is still underway.

Former prime minister Iyad Allawi beat the incumbent Iraqi leader by two seats, but neither side has been able to form a government.

Violence has fallen in Iraq in the past two years but these latest attacks show whichever side eventually wins the election will find Al Qaeda is still a deadly force to be reckoned with.

Paranoid New York police evacuating Times Square even if they see an empty paper bag

New York, May 12 (ANI): So paranoid are security agencies, including the New York Police Department, that if they find anything suspicious near Times Square, even if it is an empty paper bag, they evacuate people from the area and shut of access to it till sanitation is complete.

This is what happened on Tuesday.

The New York Post quoted an official of the department, as saying that police had to evacuate several blocks of midtown so the bomb squad could investigate a paper bag on top of a brown box near the Morgan Stanley building located at West 48th Street and Broadway.

The package was found to be non-suspicious, a NYPD spokesman said.

The evacuation came ten days after the failed Times Square car bomb attempt.

Security forces were immediately placed on heightened alert. (ANI)

US looking ‘very closely’ at adding Pak Taliban to foreign terrorist organisations list

Washington, May 12 (ANI): The Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, which is said be behind the failed plot to detonate a car bomb in Times Square, is still not in the American list of foreign terrorist organisations.

The State Department still hasn’t decided if the Pakistan Taliban should be labelled as a terrorist organization.

Senator Charles Schumer urged the Obama administration on Tuesday to add the group to the US list of foreign terrorist organizations, The Wall Street Journal reports.

“I was shocked to learn that the group was omitted from the list. They’ve declared war on the citizens of the United States. We must respond appropriately,” said Schumer.

Times Square plot suspect Faisal Shahzad has told investigators that he received bomb-making training from the Taliban in his native Pakistan.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said the Pakistan Taliban “is a group that we have been focused on for some time, but I think in light of the Times Square attempt, it’s something we’re looking at very closely.”

He said the department was being “intentionally deliberate” in studying whether to add the Pakistan Taliban to its list of foreign terrorist organizations, the paper reports.

Naming the group to the list is more than a symbolic move. It allows the government to bar foreign nationals affiliated with the group from entering the US, and allows the government to seize assets traced to the group.

Most importantly, the designation also allows prosecutors to use an anti-terror statute to criminally charge those who provide support to such groups. That has helped the US crack down on people in the US who send terrorists equipment, money or recruits. (ANI)

Some Pak officials know where Osama is: Clinton

Doing some tough talk on Pakistan, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said some people in its government are aware of the whereabouts of elusive al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and Taliban chief Mullah Omar.

“Some Pakistani officials are more informed about al-Qaeda and Taliban than they let on,” Clinton told CBS in an interview.

“I am not saying that they are at the highest levels but I believe that somewhere in this government are people who know where Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda is, where Mullah Omar and the leadership of the Afghan Taliban is, and we expect more cooperation to help us bring to justice, capture or kill, those who attacked us on 9/11,” she said.

Over the weekend, Clinton warned Pakistan that it would face “very severe consequences” if any terror plot like the failed Times Square bombing was traced to that country.

Asked if the US was not getting sufficient cooperation from Islamabad, she acknowledged a “sea change” in cooperation by Pakistan but said “we want more”.

Her comments came as US officials, including Attorney General Eric Holder, said they had evidence that the Pakistani Taliban was behind the attempt to set off a car bomb in Times Square.

Car bomb explodes near Russian military base

A car bomb exploded near a military base in Russia’s southern Dagestan region on Sunday, killing the driver of the car, a local official said.

The blast occurred about 100 meters (yards) from a military base in the town of Kaspiysk in the mainly Muslim region of Dagestan, said a spokesman for border guard troops.

“According to provisional information no one died except the driver of the car,” said the spokesman, adding that police were investigating reports the bomb was detonated by a suicide bomber.

Dagestan as well as neighbouring Chechnya and Ingushetia are at the centre of an Islamist insurgency. Militants say they want a sharia-based, pan-Caucasus state independent of Russia, a struggle whose foundations were laid over 250 years ago.

Police have been particularly on high alert for possible attacks on Sunday as Russians celebrated of the 65th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War Two.

The latest explosion completely destroyed the car, a white Lada, a witness at the scene told Reuters.

In a separate attack, a bomb disposal expert was killed overnight when he came across an explosive device near apartments housing the families of military officials in Kaspiysk, a police spokesman said.

Insurgents from Chechnya have often staged attacks on Victory Day, a holiday associated with the mass deportation of ethnic Chechens by Stalin during the war.

More than 40 people are killed when a bomb tore through a military parade in Kaspiysk on Victory Day in 2002.

Sappers on Sunday neutralised two large bombs in a park in the centre of Makhachkala, Dagestan’s administrative centre, a spokesman for the Federal Security Service said.

(Writing by Conor Humphries; Editing by Maria Golovnina)

Suspicious package found in Times Square not dangerous

New York, May 8 (IANS) A suspicious package that forced evacuation of the Times Square Friday, has been found ‘not dangerous’ and the area has been reopened for traffic.

‘The suspicious package is not dangerous’, a New York City police spokesman was quoted as saying Friday by Xinhua.

Police said the package that forced evacuation of the Times Square was examined by the bomb squad, which found it to be just a lunch cooler with beverages inside.

This was the second time in less than a week the usually-crowded New York City’s entertainment centre was evacuated because of a suspicious package. The previous evacuation turned out to be for a failed car bomb last Saturday.

The cooler was spotted by New Yorkers at about 1 p.m. (local time) Friday outside the Marriott Hotel at West 45th Street on Broadway. The bomb squad was called to the scene, which examined the cooler and found it was safe, the spokesman said.

Last Saturday, a SUV loaded with gasoline, fireworks and propane tanks failed to explode in the same area. Some of the fireworks were, however, set off, causing smoke, officials said.

A 30-year-old American citizen of Pakistan origin, Faisal Shahzad, was arrested two days later on suspicion of being involved in the attempt, they said.

Shahzad boasts of ties to numerous global terrorists

New York, May 7 (ANI): The Times Square car-bomb suspect, Faisal Shahzad, is boasting of his connections to global terrorists, giving authorities a who”s-who list of Islamic mad men he”s met with, sources said Thursday night.

Faisal Shahzad, 30, has waived his right to a lawyer and is chatting so much about his ties to anti-American fanatics that federal investigators are rolling their eyes, the New York Daily News quoted the sources, as saying.

“Maybe it”s true, but none of it has been verified at all,” a U.S. counter-terrorism official briefed on the interrogation told the paper.

Shahzad has said that he met with radical Yemeni-American cleric Anwar al-Awlaki, exchanged e-mails with Fort Hood, Texas, and met with Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud.

“He”s just blabbing away,” the official said. (ANI)

Times Square accused says inspired by Yemeni-American militant al-Awlaki

Washington, May 7 (ANI): The Pakistani-American man accused of trying to detonate a car bomb in Times Square last Saturday, has told investigators that he drew inspiration from Yemeni-American militant cleric Anwar al-Awlaki.

The New York Times quoted an American official, as saying that Faisal Shahzad had said he was “inspired by” the violent rhetoric of Awlaki.

“He listened to him, and he did it,” the official said, referring to Saturday’s attempted bombing on a busy street in Times Square.

Meanwhile, a senior military official said Thursday that Shahzad had told interrogators that he met with Pakistani Taliban operatives in North Waziristan in December and January.

He added that he had also received explosives training from the same operatives.

Counter-terrorism officials want to know how Shahzad, a naturalized American citizen who had earned an M.B.A., married and had children and worked in several corporate jobs, came to embrace violence.

Earlier this year, the Obama administration took the extraordinary step of authorizing the killing of Awlaki, making him the first American citizen on the Central Intelligence Agency’s hit list.

Awlaki’s English-language online lectures and writings have turned up in more than a dozen terrorism investigations in the United States, Britain and Canada, counter-terrorism experts have said. (ANI)

Times Square case: Expert says ”mass casualties” only milliseconds away

New York, May 4 (ANI): An explosives expert has said that the car bomb planted in New York”s Times Square came within a “millisecond” of causing “mass casualties”.

Kevin Barry, a retired NYPD bomb squad supervisor and the head of the International Association of Bomb Technicians and Investigators, said: “Several hundred” could have been killed or maimed by a fireball exploding from the Nissan Pathfinder found loaded down with firecrackers, fertilizer, gasoline, propane and alarm clocks.”

The New York Daily News further quoted Barry, as saying that the propane-fueled flames wouldn”t have brought down any buildings and would have lasted only a few seconds.

He,however, said that the 30-foot high flames would have had adevastating impact on the city”s population, causing horrific lung damage, fried hair and faces of anyone within a 50-yard radius. (ANI)