Al Qaeda in Iraq claims TV office bombing

July 29 (Reuters) – The Iraqi arm of al Qaeda has claimed responsibility for a suicide attack this week on the Baghdad office of satellite television channel Al Arabiya, and warned of further strikes on media targets. “We assume responsibility for the attack on this corrupted channel,” the Islamic State of Iraq, an al Qaeda affiliate, said in a statement on an Islamist website.

The group said it would not hesitate to target media organisations and pursue their members “as long as they persist to be a tool in the war against Allah and His Messenger”.

On Monday, a suicide bomber killed at least four people in an attack on the Saudi-owned Al Arabiya news channel, security officials said. [ID:nLDE66P0CY]

Dubai-based Al Arabiya also said four people were killed, while an Iraqi interior ministry source put the death toll at six and said about 20 others were wounded.

(Reporting by Martina Fuchs, Editing by Mark Trevelyan)

Afghan and NATO forces ready security for Kabul Conference

(Reuters) – Afghan and foreign forces are stepping up security in the Afghan capital for the biggest international conference in decades this week, where delegates will thrash out plans for handing more responsibility for the country to the government.

Over 60 envoys, among them some 40 foreign ministers and including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are expected to attend the conference on Tuesday, co-chaired by President Hamid Karzai and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

With violence at its worst levels since the Taliban were overthrown in late 2001, western diplomats are lauding the fact the conference is taking place in Kabul at all and the Afghan government is keen to see it run smoothly.

A major attack could be a disaster for the government and could score a valuable propaganda point for the insurgents.

While they say all necessary steps to thwart an assault on the day have been taken, both Afghan and NATO forces acknowledge they cannot be everywhere at once.

That message hit home on Sunday when in the latest spell of violence a suicide bomber killed two civilians and wounded several more, including a child, in a residential area in the capital, close to the U.S. embassy, the Interior Ministry said.

“We are 100 percent prepared but this doesn’t mean everything will go exactly to plan. We will try to do our best and we will also rely on the support of God,” said Zemarai Bashary, spokesman for the Interior Ministry which runs the police force.

PREPARE FOR ATTACK

NATO’s top civilian representative in Afghanistan said insurgents would try to launch an attack and no amount of security preparations could be infallible.

“We have to prepare ourselves for the fact that the insurgents are going to seek to disrupt this,” Mark Sedwill told reporters over the weekend.

“Nobody is going to offer a 100 percent guarantee, but they (security precautions) are very extensive and indeed intensive.”

Bashary said all police officers had been placed on “high alert” and had already taken up their positions in a “ring of steel” around the city. Policemen from other units such as the anti-narcotics police, would also be on standby, he said.

While Western forces are keen to point out the conference security plans have been drawn up by the Afghans, NATO said its troops would be out on the streets with their Afghan counterparts and would have a “quick reaction force” on standby.

NATO helicopters will also be circling over the city in a “show of force” to try and deter an attack, said Lieutenant Commander Katie Kendrick, a spokeswoman for NATO-led forces.

“NATO forces are also ready to assist the Afghan government with any other assets,” she said. Bashary said the ministry had not received any specific threats against the conference, but NATO forces said they had captured several militants inside the capital over the weekend who were planning to attack the meeting.

While not able to completely disrupt it, insurgents fired rockets and tried to stage a suicide attack on a peace “jirga,” or meeting, of tribal elders last month, while Karzai was addressing the gathering.

The attack was quickly suppressed but caused embarrassment for the government and led to the resignations of the interior minister and the head of the country’s intelligence service. Karzai will want to avoid a repeat of the incident.

(Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by David Fox)

Afghan, NATO forces ready security before Kabul Conference

July 18 (Reuters) – Afghan and foreign forces are stepping up security in the Afghan capital for the biggest international conference in decades this week, where delegates will thrash out plans for handing more responsibility for the country to the government. Over 60 envoys, among them some 40 foreign ministers and including U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are expected to attend the conference on Tuesday, co-chaired by President Hamid Karzai and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon.

With violence at its worst levels since the Taliban were overthrown in late 2001, western diplomats are lauding the fact the conference is taking place in Kabul at all and the Afghan government is keen to see it run smoothly.

A major attack could be a disaster for the government and could score a valuable propaganda point for the insurgents.

While they say all necessary steps to thwart an assault on the day have been taken, both Afghan and NATO forces acknowledge they cannot be everywhere at once. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For Kabul Conference stories, see [ID:nKABCON]

For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK]

or see link.reuters.com/syx62d

Afghan blog: blogs.reuters.com/afghanistan/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

That message hit home on Sunday when in the latest spell of violence a suicide bomber killed two civilians and wounded several more, including a child, in a residential area in the capital, close to the U.S. embassy, the Interior Ministry said.

“We are 100 percent prepared but this doesn’t mean everything will go exactly to plan. We will try to do our best and we will also rely on the support of God,” said Zemarai Bashary, spokesman for the Interior Ministry which runs the police force.

PREPARE FOR ATTACK

NATO’s top civilian representative in Afghanistan said insurgents would try to launch an attack and no amount of security preparations could be infallible.

“We have to prepare ourselves for the fact that the insurgents are going to seek to disrupt this,” Mark Sedwill told reporters over the weekend.

“Nobody is going to offer a 100 percent guarantee, but they (security precautions) are very extensive and indeed intensive.”

Bashary said all police officers had been placed on “high alert” and had already taken up their positions in a “ring of steel” around the city. Policemen from other units such as the anti-narcotics police, would also be on standby, he said.

While Western forces are keen to point out the conference security plans have been drawn up by the Afghans, NATO said its troops would be out on the streets with their Afghan counterparts and would have a “quick reaction force” on standby.

NATO helicopters will also be circling over the city in a “show of force” to try and deter an attack, said Lieutenant Commander Katie Kendrick, a spokeswoman for NATO-led forces.

“NATO forces are also ready to assist the Afghan government with any other assets,” she said. Bashary said the ministry had not received any specific threats against the conference, but NATO forces said they had captured several militants inside the capital over the weekend who were planning to attack the meeting.

While not able to completely disrupt it, insurgents fired rockets and tried to stage a suicide attack on a peace “jirga”, or meeting, of tribal elders last month, while Karzai was addressing the gathering.

The attack was quickly suppressed but caused embarrassment for the government and led to the resignations of the interior minister and the head of the country’s intelligence service. Karzai will want to avoid a repeat of the incident. (Writing by Jonathon Burch; Editing by David Fox) (jonathon.burch@thomsonreuters.com; +93 794 354 074; Reuters Messaging: jonathon.burch.reuters.com@reuters.net) (If you have a query or comment on this story, send an email to newsfeedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

FACTBOX-Security developments in Afghanistan, July 18

July 18 (Reuters) – Following are security developments in Afghanistan reported at 1000 GMT on Sunday.

KABUL – A suicide bomb blast aimed at a convoy of foreign forces killed four Afghan civilians in a crowded part of the capital on Sunday, a police source said. There was no immediate word about casualties among the troops.

KANDAHAR – A roadside bomb killed a police officer and an Afghan civilian in the southern city of Kandahar on Sunday, an official said.

FARAH – Taliban guerrillas staged a series of attacks on police posts before blowing up the gate of a main prison in western Farah’s town on Sunday, an official said. Twenty-three inmates initially managed to escape, but some were rearrested, he said.

FARAH – Afghan police killed a would-be suicide bomber before he could ram a car laden with explosives against a convoy of Afghan police in an area of Farah on Saturday, the interior ministry said.

BAGHLAN – Afghan and foreign forces killed five insurgents during an operation on Friday to the north of Pul-i-Khumri, the provincial capital of northern Baghlan, the ministry said.

ZABUL – Taliban guerrillas killed four police in an attack in an area of southern Zabul province on Friday, the ministry said separately.

(Compiled by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher)

(For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here)

(sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285))

If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Suicide bomber kills four civilians in Kabul

(Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed four civilians in an attack apparently aimed at a convoy of foreign forces on Sunday, security sources said.

The attack happened opposite a clinic on a road often used by foreign troops, one said, adding four more civilians were wounded.

There were no immediate word about casualties among the foreign forces, he said. The site of the attack was cordoned off.

A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said they were aware of the incident but had no details immediately.

The blast took place just two days before dozens of foreign ministers — including U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and Secretary of state Hillary Clinton — were due in the capital for an international conference of Afghanistan’s future.

Some 150,000 foreign troops are squared off against a Taliban insurgency at its strongest since the hardline Islamists were overthrown by a U.S.-led force in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox)

Suicide bombers attack Iraq militia, kill over 40

BAGHDAD, July 18 (Reuters) – A suicide bomber attacked government-backed Sunni militia on Sunday as they lined up to be paid on Baghdad’s southwestern outskirts, killing at least 39 and wounding 41, Iraqi security sources said.

In a second attack, a suicide bomber killed four and wounded six at a meeting of local Sunni militia leaders in western Iraq, near the Syrian border, police in Anbar province said.

The blast outside an Iraqi military base in the Sunni district of Radwaniya and the attack in Qaim in Anbar occurred as political deadlock continued following a March election that produced no outright winner and as yet no new government.

Sunni Islamist insurgents linked to al Qaeda have sought to exploit the political vacuum created by a failure of Sunni, Shi’ite and Kurdish factions to agree on a coalition government, and have carried out a series of attacks since the vote.

In Sunday’s bloodiest blast, the suicide bomber blew himself up among “Sahwa” militiamen, Sunni fighters who once allied with al Qaeda but turned on the militant group in 2006/07, helping U.S. forces turn the tide in the war.

“There were more than 85 people lined up in three lines at the main gate of the military base to receive salaries when a person approached us. When one of the soldiers tried to stop him, he blew himself up,” a survivor, 20-year-old Tayseer Mehsen, said at Mahmudiya hospital.

“I lost consciousness and woke up to find myself in hospital.”

All of the dead were Sahwa, while two soldiers numbered among the wounded, an Interior Ministry source said. Another security source said two of the dead were military officers.

Police put the number of dead at 39, but the Interior Ministry source said 43 had died. Conflicting death tolls are common in the chaos after an explosion.

‘NO STRANGERS AMONG US’

Local militia leader Mohammed al-Anbari said it was possible the attacker came from within Sahwa ranks. “There were no strangers among us,” he said. There have been a series of attacks against Sahwa leaders in Sunni areas around Baghdad in recent months, many attributed to acts of revenge by former fellow insurgents, or al Qaeda. Some have been blamed on long-running blood feuds between families.

The sectarian war between once dominant Sunnis and majority Shi’ites that kicked off after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion has largely subsided but a Sunni Islamist insurgency persists.

The U.S. military has increasingly taken a backseat role since pulling out of Iraqi urban centres in June last year and U.S. troops will end combat operations on Aug. 31 ahead of a full withdrawal next year. (Additional reporting by Suadad al-Salhy, Waleed Ibrahim, and Reuters Television in Baghdad, Fadel al-Badrani in Falluja; writing by Michael Christie; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Suicide bomber kills four civilians in Kabul

KABUL, July 18 (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed four civilians in an attack apparently aimed at a convoy of foreign forces on Sunday, security sources said.

The attack happened opposite a clinic on a road often used by foreign troops, one said, adding four more civilians were wounded.

There were no immediate word about casualties among the foreign forces, he said. The site of the attack was cordoned off.

A spokesman for the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said they were aware of the incident but had no details immediately.

The blast took place just two days before dozens of foreign ministers — including U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and U.S. Secretary of state Hillary Clinton — were due in the capital for an international conference of Afghanistan’s future.

Some 150,000 foreign troops are squared off against a Taliban insurgency at its strongest since the hardline Islamists were overthrown by a U.S.-led force in the aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

(Reporting by Sayed Salahuddin; Editing by David Fox) (For more Reuters coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, see: here) (sayed.salahuddin@thomsonreuters.com; Kabul newsroom: +93 799 335 285)) (If you have a query or comment about this story, send an e-mail to news.feedback.asia@thomsonreuters.com)

Death toll in Iraq suicide blast reaches 39

July 18 (Reuters) – The death toll from an attack in southwestern Baghdad by a suicide bomber on a group of government-backed Sunni militiamen reached at least 39, with around 41 wounded, Iraqi police said on Sunday.

The blast occurred as the men, who once fought with al Qaeda against U.S. forces but switched allegiance in 2006/07, were collecting wages outside a military base. (Reporting by Reuters Television; writing by Michael Christie; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Suicide bomber attacks Sunni militia in Baghdad

July 18 (Reuters) – A suicide bomber on Sunday attacked government-backed Sunni militia as they lined up to be paid in western Baghdad, killing at least three and wounding nine, Iraqi police said.

The blast in the Sunni district of Radwaniya occurred as political deadlock continued in the war-damaged country following a March election that produced no outright winner and as yet no new government. (Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Michael Christie; Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Uganda makes arrests after twin bomb blasts

July 13 (Reuters) – Uganda has made arrests after Somali Islamists said they detonated two bombs killing at least 74 people, and an unexploded suicide-bomb belt has been found at a new site, a government spokesman said on Tuesday,

“Arrests were made late yesterday after an unexploded suicide bomber’s belt was found in the Makindye area (of the capital Kampala),” said government spokesman Fred Opolot. (Reporting by Jeremy Clarke; Editing by Richard Lough)

Suicide attack kills 3, wound 50 in NW Pakistan

Pakistan, July 9 (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed three people and wounded nearly 50 in an attack outside the office of a senior government official in northwestern Pakistan on Friday, government and hospital officials said.

The bomber struck when dozens of people were gathered around the office in the Mohmand ethnic Pashtun tribal region on the Afghan border, where security forces have stepped up attacks on Taliban militants in recent weeks.

“The bomber blew himself up outside the office of an assistant political agent, killing himself and wounding dozens others,” a government official, Mehraj Khan, told Reuters.

Hospital officials said three people were killed and nearly 50 were being treated for multiple wounds.

Pakistan launched two major offensives in the northwest last year against homegrown Taliban militants who have killed hundreds of people in retaliatory attacks across Pakistan, mostly in the northwest, but also in major cities. (Reporting by Izaz Mohmand; Writing by Augustine Anthony; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Ron Popeski) (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)

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)

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)

Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KANDAHAR – A suicide bomber killed around 40 people and wounded 77 others in an attack on a wedding party in the Arghandab district of southern Kandahar province on Wednesday night, police and provincial officials said.

GHAZNI – A roadside bomb killed three Afghan policemen in the southwest of Ghazni province on Wednesday, Interior Ministry said.

KUNAR – Three insurgents were killed and two others wounded in a gun battle when Taliban attacked a police post in the eastern Kunar province overnight, Interior Ministry said in a statement. Two police officers were also wounded, it said.

(Compiled by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by David Fox)

Factbox: Security developments in Afghanistan

KANDAHAR – A suicide bomber killed around 40 people and wounded 77 others in an attack on a wedding party in the Arghandab district of southern Kandahar province on Wednesday night, police and provincial officials said.

GHAZNI – A roadside bomb killed three Afghan policemen in the southwest of Ghazni province on Wednesday, Interior Ministry said.

KUNAR – Three insurgents were killed and two others wounded in a gun battle when Taliban attacked a police post in the eastern Kunar province overnight, Interior Ministry said in a statement. Two police officers were also wounded, it said.

(Compiled by Hamid Shalizi; Editing by David Fox)

June 10 (Reuters) – South Korea plans to give banks, both domestic and foreign, two years to adjust their currency forward positions when it announces restrictions on such trades early next week, an online media outlet reported on Thursday.

Afghanistan (Reuters) – At least 40 people were killed and 77 injured by a suicide bomb attack on a packed wedding party in insurgency-plagued southern Afghanistan, officials said on Thursday.

World

“A suicide bomber went inside the party where hundreds of people were sitting and blew himself up,” a police official said of the blast at around 9:30 p.m. (1700 GMT) on Wednesday in Arghandab district, north of Kandahar, where foreign troops are focusing on a push in coming months to whittle out the Taliban.

A Kandahar policeman said many of the guests had links to local police officials or a local militia, which was why it was likely targeted, although the Taliban denied responsibility.

“We condemn such a brutal act,” Taliban spokesman Qari Yousuf Ahmadi told Reuters from an undisclosed location. “The Taliban wage Jihad (holy war) in order to free the people from the hands of occupiers. How can we kill them?”

The Taliban have previously claimed responsibility for insurgent attacks, but recanted once civilian casualties have become clear.

Ahmadi laid blame at the feet of the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for Afghanistan, which has killed hundreds of civilians in misdirected air strikes. Taliban attacks have claimed more civilian lives.

An ISAF spokeswoman said it was not involved in the blast and had helped local security forces in follow up operations.

“This is an Afghan matter,” the spokeswoman said.

CHILDREN AMONG DEAD

Witnesses described scenes of chaos at the wedding, which had drawn around 400 celebrants including women and children from nearby villages.

“Some people were waiting for food, others were dancing inside a big tent, when I heard a deafening blast,” a wounded survivor named Aminullah said.

“The dust went up in the sky and I saw dead bodies everywhere. Women and children were screaming. I thought it was end of the world.”

Children were among the dead, the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

The Taliban have regrouped since their U.S.-led overthrow in 2001 and now engage a foreign force that is expected to grow to 150,000 in coming months as part of an offensive against insurgent strongholds in the south.

A favored tactic is improvised explosive devices (IEDs) or suicide attacks on foreign or Afghan forces, but pro-government sympathizers are also targeted and the insurgency used as a cover to settle old scores.

Rural wedding parties in Afghanistan can often be raucous affairs with large gatherings of people and frequently accompanied by celebratory gunfire. Several have mistakenly been attacked in the past by foreign forces.

(Additional reporting by Hamid Shalizi in Kabul; Writing by David Fox; Editing by Dan Williams)

Taliban militants get life term in Pakistan

Islamabad, June 6 (IANS) A Pakistani court has handed down life terms to six Taliban militants accused of planning attacks on foreigners and manufacturing suicide jackets, officials said.

The court gave the sentence Saturday.

Police had arrested the six Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan militants, including a would-be suicide bomber near Lahore in February, and seized hand grenades, explosives, suicide jackets and five detonators, Xinhua reported quoting court officials.

Suicide bomber kills four police in Iraqi capital

A suicide bomber drove a car packed with explosives into a crowd of police officers at shift change outside a police station in Baghdad on Sunday, killing four and wounding 12, a source in Iraq’s Interior Ministry said.

The bomber struck in the mainly Shi’ite Amil district in the southwestern area of the Iraqi capital, the source said.

Tensions have been running high since a parliamentary election nearly three months ago that produced no clear winner, forcing potentially divisive negotiations between Iraq’s Shi’ite, Sunni and Kurdish political factions to agree a new government.

Overall violence has tumbled since the worst of Iraq’s sectarian warfare in 2006-07, when tens of thousands of people were killed.

But civilian deaths have climbed since the March 7 election. Iraqi authorities said 275 civilians were killed in bomb blasts and other attacks in May and 274 in April, up from 216 in March and 211 in February.

A cross-sectarian electoral coalition led by secularist former Prime Minister Iyad Allawi rode strong support from Iraq’s minority Sunnis to a two-seat victory over a largely Shi’ite bloc headed by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki.

But Maliki’s State of Law group has announced a tentative alliance with the third-place finisher, the Shi’ite Iraqi National Alliance, to form a single bloc in parliament.

Allawi has warned that any attempt by the Shi’ite groups to form a government that excludes his Sunni-backed Iraqiya coalition could spark renewed violence.

On Saturday, gunmen killed an Iraqiya candidate who did not win a seat in parliament. Faras al-Jubouri was shot to death in his home near the troubled northern city of Mosul.

He was the second Iraqiya candidate to be killed since the election.

(Writing by Jim Loney; Editing by Michael Roddy)

Suicide bomber blows himself up in Kabul

Kabul, May 29 (IANS) A man tied an explosive device on to his body and blew himself up in Kabul Saturday, police said.

The incident happened in the 9th precinct of Kabul city at around 12.30 p.m. local time, Xinhua quoted a police officer as saying.

Though the bomber killed himself, there was no other loss of life or property, the officer said but declined to be named. The blast occurred in Depichary area, through which convoys of Afghan and NATO-led forces’ often pass.

No militant outfit has made any comment on the incident till now, he said

Taliban planning to attack Parliament House, warns Pak intelligence

Lahore, May 19 (ANI): Pakistan’s intelligence agencies have warned that the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) is planning to target Parliament House and other important government installations.

According to intelligence inputs, the TTP has recruited a suicide bomber named Amer Aaqa Hadifa, who is in his 20’s, to strike at important buildings.

The intelligence report said that Hadifa was last seen in the Mir Ali region of the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), The Daily Times reports

Following the report, all the concerned agencies have been directed to beef up security in and around Parliament and all other government buildings in Islamabad and across the country.

Security agencies have also been asked to keep a tight vigil on all entry and exit points of the capital city and also in Lahore. (ANI)