June 19, 2013

51 killed in new wave of Iraq attacks

 51 killed in new wave of Iraq attacks
Iraqi security inspect the site of a in Basra, 340 miles southeast of Baghdad, Iraq, Sunday, June 16, 2013.(Photo: Nabil Al-Jurani, AP)

Story Highlights

10 coordinated car bombs and a shooting across Iraq
Violence has killed at least 51 and wounded dozens
Blasts hit half a and towns in the south and center of the country

BAGHDAD (AP) — A blistering string of apparently coordinated bombings and a shooting across Iraq killed at least 51 and wounded dozens Sunday, spreading fear throughout the country in a wave of violence that is raising the prospect of a return to widespread sectarian killing a decade after a U.S.-led invasion.

Violence has spiked sharply in Iraq in recent months, with the death toll rising to levels not seen since 2008. Nearly 2,000 have been killed since the start of April, including more than 180 this month.

The surge in bloodshed accompanies rising sectarian tensions within Iraq and growing concerns that its unrest is being fanned by the Syrian civil war raging next door.

One of the deadliest attacks came in the evening when a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a cafe packed with young people in the largely Shiite neighborhood of al-Ameen in southeastern Baghdad. The attack killed 11 and wounded 25, according to police.

Clothes shop owner Saif Hameed, 24, was watching TV at home when he heard the blast nearby. He saw several of the wounded being loaded into .

“It seems the terrorists are targeting any place they can, no matter what it is,” he said. “The main things for them are to kill as many Iraqis as they can and keep the people living in fear.”

Most of Sunday’s car bombs hit Shiite-majority areas and caused most of the casualties. The blasts hit half a dozen cities and towns in the south and center of the country.

There was no claim of responsibility for any of the attacks, but they bore the hallmark of al-Qaida in Iraq, which uses car bombs, and coordinated attacks, most aimed at security forces and members of Iraq’s Shiite majority.

The U.S. Embassy condemned the attacks, saying it stands with Iraqis “who seek to live in peace and who reject cowardly acts of terrorism such as this.” The U.S. withdrew its last combat troops from Iraq in December 2011, though a small number remain as an arm of the embassy to provide training and facilitate arms sales.

Sunday’s blasts began with a parked exploding early in the morning in the industrial area of the city of Kut, killing six people and wounding 15 others. That was followed by another outside the city that targeted construction workers. It killed five and wounded 12, according to police.

In a teahouse hit by one of the blasts, a blood-stained tribal headdress and slippers were strewn on the floor, alongside overturned chair and couches. Kut is 100 miles southeast of Baghdad.

In the oil-rich city of Basra in southern Iraq, a car bomb exploded on a busy downtown street. As police and rescuers rushed to the scene of the initial blast, a second car exploded. Six people were reported killed. Cleaners were seen sweeping up pieces of the car bomb, which damaged nearby cars and shops.

About an hour later, parked car bombs ripped through two neighborhoods in the southern city of Nasiriyah, 200 milessoutheast of Baghdad, killing two and wounding 19, police said.

In the Shiite of Najaf, 100 miles south of Baghdad, a blast struck a produce market, killing eight and wounding 28. Watermelons, tomatoes and apples were seen scattered on the ground. A bulldozer loaded charred and twisted stalls and cars into a waiting truck.

Blasts were also reported in the communities of Hillah, Mahmoudiya and Madain, all south of Baghdad, killing seven in total. In the northern city of Tuz Khormato, a roadside bomb targeted a passing police patrol, killing two .

The shooting broke out near the restive northern city of Mosul. Police officials say attacked police guarding a remote stretch of an oil pipeline, killing four and wounding five. Mosul, some 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, has been the scene of some of the deadliest unrest outside the Baghdad area in recent weeks.

Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures. Officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they weren’t allowed to release the information to reporters.

The attacks came a day after the leader of al-Qaida’s Iraq arm, known as the , defiantly rejected an order from the terror network’s central command to stop claiming control over the organization’s Syria affiliate, according to a message purportedly from him.

Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s comments reveal his group’s determination to link its own fight against the Shiite-led government in Baghdad with the cause of rebels trying to topple the Iran-backed Syrian regime.

Suicide blast kills 19 in Iraq, including Iranians

 Suicide blast kills 19 in Iraq, including Iranians
Worshippers attend joint Sunni-Shiite prayers in Baghdad, June 7, 2013, in a show of .(Photo: Hadi Mizban, AP)

Story Highlights

Monthly death tolls in Iraq hit the highest levels since 2008
The suicide bomb targeted Iranian Shiite pilgrims
dominate some areas of Iraq

BAGHDAD (AP) — rammed car bombs on Friday into a bus carrying Iranian pilgrims and a west of Baghdad, killing 19 people in all, in the latest bout of violence to rattle Iraq.

The attacks follow the deadliest two months in Iraq in half a decade, raising fears the country is descending into a renewed wave of widespread killing like the one that drove the nation to the brink of civil war following the U.S.-led invasion.

Friday’s first attack struck in the morning, when a drove his explosives-laden car into a bus carrying Iranian Shiite pilgrims who were on their way to visit shrines in the of Najaf.

The attack took place near the town of Muqdadiyah, about 90 kilometers (60 miles) north of Baghdad. Police said 11 pilgrims were killed and 31 other people were wounded in the blast.

Since the 2003 invasion, foreign pilgrims from Iran and other countries have poured into Najaf, whose Imam Ali shrine is one of the holiest sites for .

In the evening, attackers drove two more car bombs into a major highway checkpoint between the cities of Fallujah and Ramadi in the Sunni-dominated Anbar province west of Baghdad, detonating them nearly simultaneously.

Four police officers and four civilians died in that attack, according to police.

Medical officials confirmed the causality figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

Iraq has been ravaged by a spike in violence in recent weeks, with recent monthly death tolls rising to levels not seen since 2008. According to the United Nations, at least 1,045 Iraqi civilians and were killed in May. The tally surpassed April’s 712 killed.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Friday’s attacks, but Sunni extremists frequently target the Shiite-led government’s security forces and Shiite pilgrims, who they believe are not true Muslims.

The attacks came a day after a series of explosions in and around Baghdad killed 14 people.

Afghan bomb kills 15, including 6 Americans

d57328b931fafa8eab1cfe487a5b166d Afghan bomb kills 15, including 6 Americans

Story Highlights

Suicide bomber strikes military convoy in Afghan capital
Muslim militant group claims responsibility
Deadliest attack to rock the Afghan capital in more than two months

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A suicide car bombing tore through a U.S. convoy during rush hour in the Afghan capital on Thursday, killing at least 15 people, including six U.S. military advisers and two children, officials said. U.S. soldiers rushed to the scene to help, including some wearing only T-shirts or shorts under their .

An Islamic militant group claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was carried out by a new suicide unit formed in response to reports that the U.S. plans to keep permanent bases and even after the 2014 deadline for the end of the foreign combat mission. Hezb-e-Islami said its fighters had stalked the Americans for a week to learn their routine before striking.

It was the deadliest attack to rock the Afghan capital in more than two months and followed a series of other attacks against Americans that has made May the deadliest month for international forces this year. U.S.-led forces are increasingly leaving the fighting to their Afghan counterparts and focusing more on training mission in a bid to prepare the to take over their own security after the mission ends by the end of 2014.

The explosion was powerful enough to rattle buildings on the other side of the city, and left body parts scattered on the street.

Cmdr. Bill Speaks, a spokesman for the U.S. Defense secretary, confirmed that two American soldiers were killed, while international security company DynCorp International said four of its American civilian contractors were among the dead. DynCorp International said its employees were working with U.S. forces training the Afghan military when the blast occurred.

Nine Afghan civilians also were killed, including two children, and 35 people were wounded, spokesman Kanishka Beektash Torkystani said.

The deaths pushed the monthly toll for the U.S.-led coalition to 18, making May the deadliest month so far this year. By comparison, 44 international troops were killed in the same period last year, reflecting the fact that the overall number of deaths has dropped as Afghan forces increasingly take the lead.

The suicide bomber detonated his explosives-laden car at about 8 a.m., Kabul provincial Hashmad Stanakzi said. “The explosion was very big. It set the nearby buildings on fire,” he said.

Kabul Amin said it was difficult to count the dead because the blast tore apart many of the bodies.

“We saw two dead bodies of children on the ground,” Amin said. “But the rest of the (shattered) bodies were scattered around.”

It was the bloodiest attack in the Afghan capital since March 9, when suicide bombers struck near the Afghan Defense Ministry while U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel was visiting.

President Hamid Karzai condemned the attack, saying it was the work of “terrorists and enemies of Afghanistan’s peace.”

A spokesman for Hizb-e-Islami, Haroon Zarghoon, told The Associated Press that one of the movement’s operatives carried out the attack on two vehicles of U.S. advisers.

Zarghoon says the militant group has formed a new cell to carry out suicide attacks on U.S. and other coalition troops.

“The cell had been monitoring the movement and timing of the American convoy for a week and implemented the plan Thursday morning,” Zarghoon said.

He said the cell was established in response to reports that the U.S. plans to keep permanent bases and troops in Afghanistan even after the NATO withdrawal.

The U.S. has said it wants no permanent bases in Afghanistan after 2014, but Afghan President Hamid Karzai raised eyebrows last week when he announced he had agreed to an American request to keep nine bases.

A small American force is expected to remain in the country to assist Afghans in keeping security, but the exact number or mission has not yet been decided.

Hizb-e-Islami, a fierce rival of the Taliban movement as well as the Americans, is headed by 65-year-old Gubuddin Hekmatyar, a former Afghan prime minister and onetime U.S. ally who is now listed as a terrorist by Washington. The militia has thousands of fighters and followers in the country’s north and east.

Hekmatyar’s government was heavily financed by the U.S. during Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s. He is now is being hunted by Afghan and NATO troops. U.S. bombs have targeted his military chief, Kashmir Khan, in Kunar province in northeastern Afghanistan on the border with Pakistan. Khan was wounded but survived.

However, Hekmatyar’s son-in-law has held peace talks with Karzai and American officials. In a further sign of the complexities of the Afghan insurgency, Hizb-e-Islami is also a rival to the Taliban insurgency, even though both movements share the goal of driving out foreign troops and establishing a state that would follow a strict interpretation of Islamic law.

Hekmatyar and the Taliban supreme leader, Mullah Omar, are said to be bitter personal enemies.

Thursday’s attack was the second in eight months claimed by Hizb-e-Islami. In September, the militant group claimed responsibility when a female suicide car bomber killed least 12 people. At the time, Hizb-e-Islami said the attack was revenge for the film “Innocence of Muslims,” which was made by an Egyptian-born American citizen and infuriated Muslims for its negative depiction of the Prophet Muhammad.

Suicide attack at Baghdad cafe kills at least 26

 Suicide attack at Baghdad cafe kills at least 26
soldiers inspect explosives buried in the backyard of a house seized by Iraqi security forces during recent operations in Baghdad’s Adhamiya district, Iraq, Thursday.(Photo: Kadim, AP)

Story Highlights

Cafe in western Baghdad was full of customers
Two children, a woman among the dead
More than 50 people were wounded

BAGHDAD (AP) — A detonated explosives at a Baghdad cafe crowded with young people late Thursday, killing at least 26 and wounding dozens ahead of provincial elections scheduled for the weekend.

The rare evening attack, which came at the start of the local weekend, brought to 30 the number of people killed across the country Thursday.

The cafe bomber struck about 9:30 p.m. Police said that two children and a woman who were passing by at the time of the blast were among the dead. More than 50 people were wounded.

The packed cafe is on the third floor of a building in the predominantly Sunni neighborhood of Amiriyah. Police said the cafe was packed with young people enjoying water pipes and playing pool.

Earlier in the day, a struck an army convoy in Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, killing and wounding five others. Hours later, one policeman was killed and three others were wounded when gunmen attacked a security checkpoint in western Baghdad, police said.

confirmed the casualties. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

Violence has been on the rise ahead of provincial elections to be held on Saturday. The vote is for local officials in several provinces across the country, including the capital, Baghdad. Authorities have been vowing to bolster security ahead of the elections.

Also on Thursday, Iraq’s self-ruled Kurdish region announced that new parliamentary and will be held on Sept. 21.

A Kurdish said that Masoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdish region, approved the date for the elections and called for a fair election.

Following the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Iraqi dictator , the Kurdish area was recognized as an autonomous region that is in many ways politically independent from Baghdad. Since then, the two main Kurdish parties — the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Democratic Party of Kurdistan — have joined forces to rule the oil-rich region.

Baghdad and the have been at loggerheads for years over several issues, including oil and control over disputed areas claimed by both sides. The vote for a new 111-seat National Assembly would be the third election in the three-province Kurdish region since 2005.

Syrian rebels enter strategic Aleppo neighborhood

9abad9c189ea7c2fd62dc26479325720 Syrian rebels enter strategic Aleppo neighborhood
In this Thursday March 28, 2013 image taken from video obtained from the Ugarit News, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows a building at the Syrian government checkpoint on fire, in Dael less than 15 kilometers (10 miles) from the Jordanian border in Daraa province, Syria.(Photo: AP)

Story Highlights

Reports vary on how much of Aleppo was seized
A pro-Assad cleric was captured and killed
Violence and continue in other towns

BEIRUT (AP) — Syrian rebels pushed into a strategic neighborhood in the northern city of Aleppo after days of heavy , seizing control of at least part of the hilltop district and killing a pro-government Sunni captured in the fighting, activists and state media said Saturday.

While there were conflicting reports about the scale of the into the Sheik Maqsoud neighborhood, the gains marked the biggest shift in the front lines in the embattled city of Aleppo in months. The city, Syria’s largest and a former commercial hub, has been a key in the country’s civil war since rebels launched an offensive on it in July, seizing several districts before the fighting largely settled into a bloody .

The Aleppo Media Center and Aleppo-based activist Mohammed Saeed said rebels seized full control of Sheik Maqsoud late Friday.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, however, said rebels took only the eastern part of the neighborhood, and reported heavy fighting there Saturday.

Sheik Maqsoud, which is predominantly inhabited by minority , is located on a hill on the northern edge of the city, making it a strategic location overlooking Aleppo.

The Observatory said rebels captured a pro-government Sunni Muslim cleric in the fighting, killed him and then paraded his body around the neighborhood.

State-run Al-Ikhbariya TV identified the cleric as Hassan Seifeddine. It said he was beheaded and his head was placed on the minaret of Al-Hassan Mosque where he used to lead the prayers.

The SANA said Seifeddine’s body was “mutilated” after the “assassination.”

The reports of the mutilation of the cleric’s body could not be independently confirmed.

The killing of Seifeddine comes nearly 10 days after a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a mosque in the heart of the Syrian capital of Damascus, killing top Sunni preacher Sheik Mohammad Said Ramadan al-Buti as he was giving a sermon. The March 21 blast killed 48 others and wounded dozens.

Al-Buti, like Seifeddine, was a strong supporter of the Assad regime, which is dominated by members of the president’s minority Alawite sect, an off-shoot of Shiite Islam. The opposition is made up of mostly Sunnis, who are the majority among Syrians.

Extremists have been playing a bigger role among the rebel groups. They include the Islamic Jabhat al-Nusra, a powerful offshoot of al-Qaeda in Iraq, which has claimed responsibility for most of the deadliest against regime and military facilities and, as a result, has gained popularity among some rebels.

A photograph recently posted online by activists showed the turbaned Seifeddine, who was in his late 50s, with a white beard. “A wanted agent,” read a banner posted over the picture. Another referred to him as wanted by the rebels and read: “An agent of Syria’s ruling gang and wanted by the Free Syrian Army.”

Aleppo-based Sunni cleric Abdul-Qadir Shehabi told state-run TV that Seifeddine’s son was kidnapped months ago. Shehabi also lashed out at the rebels, saying they “mutilated” Seifeddine’s body.

“Is this the freedom that they talk about? This is the freedom of Satan,” Shehabi said, referring to rebels who say they are fighting Assad’s regime because it is authoritarian.

Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Observatory, said Seifeddine’s name had been put on an opposition “death list.”

“He was the imam of a mosque. He was not armed when he was killed,” Abdul-Rahman said. “We cannot close our eyes when the opposition violates human rights.”

Elsewhere in Syria, activists reported violence in areas the southern province of Daraa, the suburbs of Damascus and the northern regions of Idlib and Raqqa. The Observatory said the heaviest clashes were in Raqqa and Sheik Maqsoud.

Abdul-Rahman, who heads the Observatory, said the Sheik Maqsoud fighting killed 14 pro-government gunmen, seven rebels, 10 civilians and Seifeddine.

In Damascus, residents said power was cut on Saturday in some neighborhoods. Al-Ikhbariya TV quoted Minister of Electricity Imad Khamis as saying the network suffered a technical problem and it will be fixed in the next 24 hours.

Damascus has witnessed repeated cuts in the past months.

Al Qaeda claims assault on Iraqi justice ministry

69a0e7cd39f239c23f79ef8e76bf57d2 Al Qaeda claims assault on Iraqi justice ministry

(Reuters) – Al Qaeda’s Iraqi affiliate said on Sunday it carried out a coordinated and gun attack on the country’s last week that killed at least 25 people in the centre of Baghdad.

The assault near the heavily fortified Green Zone, where several and government offices are located, fanned fears about Iraq’s still a decade after the invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.

Three exploded and a suicide bomber blew himself up in broad daylight in the heart of the capital on Thursday.

Another suicide bomber then walked into the justice ministry and set off his device while militants attacked the building. Iraqi security forces eventually regained control.

(ISI), an for al Qaeda-linked Sunni Muslim insurgents, said it had ordered the suicide bombers to attack the building floor by floor and “liquidate” its enemies inside.

Islamic State of Iraq accuses Iraq’s Shi’ite Muslim-led government of oppressing Sunnis.

“In a blessed raid among a series of operations for revenge … Baghdad’s knights undermined another vicious bastion which was always a tool against Sunnis, torturing, terrifying, imprisoning and executing them,” al-Qaeda said in a statement published online.

Iraq’s power-sharing government has been all but paralyzed since U.S. troops left more than a year ago. Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi’ite, is facing protests in the country’s Sunni heartland, which shares a porous border with Syria.

Violence has intensified as Sunni opposition protests have swelled and Iraq’s al Qaeda affiliate has urged the protesters to take up arms against the government.

Security experts say al Qaeda-linked militants have been regrouping in the of Anbar and crossing into Syria to fight alongside mainly Sunni rebels battling forces loyal to Syria’s President Bashar al-, who belongs to an offshoot of Shi-ite Islam.

(Reporting by Aseel Kami; Editing by and Andrew Heavens)

Afghan police officer embraces suicide bomber to save others

130309033336 afghanistan blast story top Afghan police officer embraces suicide bomber to save others
Afghanistan National Army (ANA) soldiers try to remove a destroyed car at the site of a sucide attack next to the in Kabul Saturday.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

The suicide bomber attempts to enter a town, where coalition and Afghan forces are training
Police at a checkpoint recognize he is wearing an explosive vest
One officer embraces him to blunt the effects of the explosives
The bomber detonates his explosives, killing the officer and eight children

() — A policeman sacrificed his life for the sake of others, embracing a suicide bomber in southeast Afghanistan on Saturday morning to dull the blast as it detonated, said.

The bomb killed the officer, Murad Khan, and eight minors between the ages of 7 and 17.

It wounded two more people, said Haji Yaqoob of province.

The bomber attempted to enter a village where were conducting training exercises with Afghan police, but officers at a checkpoint recognized his explosive vest and stopped him, police said.

The training session had convened near the checkpoint, and Yaqoob believes it was the .

In a separate incident Saturday, a suicide bomber on a bicycle detonated himself at a gate to the Afghan defense ministry in Kabul while newly appointed U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was attending a briefing nearby. He was not injured.

The secretary is in Afghanistan to visit American troops and get the lay of the land in the restive country to better advise President .

Hagel emphasized that the United States is still at war in Afghanistan despite the current mission to transition into a role of “training, assistance and advice.”

This is the latest suicide attack in the nation.

A car bomber drove up to a U.S. military base in Khost province in December, but did not make it past the gate. The vehicle’s killed three people — a security guard and two truck drivers.

Coalition forces in Khost are moving from a side by side with Afghan National Army troops to an advisory role.

Insurgents launch 4 attacks in Afghanistan

 Insurgents launch 4 attacks in Afghanistan

Story Highlights

Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the bombing near intelligence agency
In Kabul. a shootout between security forces and a would-be attacker
Other bombings in outlying provinces

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A series of early morning attacks hit eastern Afghanistan Sunday, with three separate suicide bombings in outlying provinces and a shootout between security forces and a would-be attacker in the capital city of Kabul.

The attacks were a reminder that insurgents are still going on the offensive even as U.S. and other international forces draw down. All four attacks Sunday appeared to Afghan forces, who have been suffering higher casualties this year. Afghan soldiers and police are easier targets than their NATO allies because their checkpoints and bases are less fortified.

The deadliest attack Sunday was a suicide at a site just after sunrise in the eastern city of Jalalabad. In that attack, a car approached the gate of a compound used by the National Directorate of Security and exploded, killing two guards and wounding three others, said regional Ahmad Zia Abdulzai. The building was damaged in the attack, he added.

Taliban spokesman Zabiullah Mujahid claimed responsibility for the bombing.

Shortly before the Jalalabad attack, an detonated a van packed with explosives at a highway police checkpoint in Logar province, also in the east. That explosion wounded three police officers but no one was killed, said Rais Khan Abdul Rahimzai.

In Kabul, meanwhile, police shot and killed a would-be who was trying to attack an intelligence agency office downtown, according to the city’s deputy police chief, Gen. Mohammad Amin. Intelligence agents spotted the bomber before he could detonate the explosives in his vehicle and shot him, Amin said.

The explosives in the vehicle were later defused, he added.

Later in the morning, a man wearing a suicide vest blew himself up outside the police headquarters for Baraki Barak district in Logar province. The man was stopped by police as he tried to force his way into the building, but still managed to detonate his vest, said Din Mohammad Darwesh, the provincial government spokesman.

One policeman was wounded in the Baraki Barak attack, Darwesh said.

Bombings kill 115 people in Pakistan

 Bombings kill 115 people in Pakistan
officers and local residents gather at the site of bombing in Quetta, Pakistan, on Thursday.(Photo: Butt, AP)

Story Highlights

Blasts mark one of deadliest days in recent years in Pakistan
More than 120 people were wounded
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — A series of bombings killed 115 people across Pakistan on Thursday, including 81 who died in twin blasts on a bustling billiards hall in a Shiite area of the southwestern city of Quetta.

Pakistan’s minority have increasingly been targeted by radical Sunnis who consider them , and a militant Sunni group claimed responsibility for Thursday’s deadliest attack — sending a into the packed pool hall and then detonating a car bomb five minutes later.

It was one of the deadliest days in recent years for a country that is no stranger to violence from radical Islamists, militant and .

Violence has been especially intense in southwest Baluchistan province, where Quetta is the capital and the country’s largest concentration of live. Many are ethnic Hazara who migrated from neighboring Afghanistan.

The billiards hall targeted Thursday was located in an area dominated by the minority sect. In addition to the 81 dead, more than 120 people were wounded in the double bombing, said police officer Zubair Mehmood. The dead included police officers, journalists and rescue workers who responded to the initial explosion.

Ghulam Abbas, a Shiite who lives about 150 yard (meters) from the billiards hall, said he was at home with his family when the first blast occurred. He was trying to decide whether to head to the scene when the second bomb went off.

“The second blast was a deafening one, and I fell down,” he said. “I could hear cries and minutes later I saw ambulances taking the injured to the hospital.”

Hospitals and a local mortuary were overwhelmed as the dead and wounded arrived throughout the evening. Weeping relatives gathered outside the emergency room at Quetta’s Civil Hospital. Inside the morgue, bodies were laid out on the floor.

The bombs severely damaged the three-story building where the pool hall was located and set it on fire. It also damaged nearby shops, homes and offices.

Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni militant group with strong ties to the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack. Hazara Shiites, who migrated from Afghanistan more than a century ago, have been the targets of dozens of attacks by Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in Quetta over the past year, but Thursday’s was by far the bloodiest.

Human Rights Watch sharply criticized the Pakistani government for not doing enough to crack down on the killings and protect the country’s vulnerable Shiite community. It said more than 400 Shiites were killed in targeted attacks in Pakistan in 2012, including over 120 in Baluchistan.

“2012 was the bloodiest year for Pakistan’s Shia community in living memory and if this latest attack is any indication, 2013 has started on an even more dismal note,” said Ali Dayan Hasan, Pakistan director at Human Rights Watch.

“As Shia community members continue to be slaughtered in cold blood, the callousness and indifference of authorities offers a damning indictment of the state, its military and security agencies,” Hasan said. “Pakistan’s tolerance for religious extremists is not just destroying lives and alienating entire communities, it is destroying Pakistani society across the board.”

Pakistan’s intelligence agencies helped nurture Sunni militant groups like Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in the 1980s, to counter a perceived threat from neighboring Iran, which is mostly Shiite. Pakistan banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in 2001, but the group continues to operate fairly freely.

Earlier Thursday, a bomb targeting paramilitary soldiers in a commercial area in Quetta killed 12 people and wounded more than 40 others.

The bomb was concealed in a bag and placed near a vehicle carrying paramilitary soldiers, said Akbar Hussain Durrani, the provincial interior secretary. The bag was spotted by a local resident, but before the soldiers could react, it was detonated by remote control.

The United Baluch Army, a separatist group, claimed responsibility for the attack in calls to local journalists. Pakistan has faced a violent insurgency in Baluchistan for years from nationalists who demand greater autonomy and a larger share of the country’s natural resources.

Elsewhere in Pakistan, a bomb in a crowded Sunni mosque in the northwest city of Mingora killed 22 people and wounded more than 70, said senior police officer Akhtar Hayyat.

No group claimed responsibility for that attack, but suspicion fell on the Pakistani Taliban, which has waged a bloody insurgency against the government in the Swat Valley, where Mingora is located, and other parts of the northwest.

Pakistan is also home to many enemies of the U.S. who Washington has frequently targeted with drone attacks. A U.S. missile strike in the northwest tribal region Thursday killed five suspected militants in the seventh such attack in two weeks, Pakistani intelligence officials said.

The recent spate of strikes has been one of the most intense in the past two years, a period in which political tensions between the U.S. and Pakistan led to a reduced number of attacks compared to 2010, when they were at their most frequent.

It’s unclear whether the current uptick has been caused by particularly valuable intelligence obtained by the CIA, or whether the warming of relations between the two countries has made strikes less sensitive. Protests by the government and Islamic hard-liners have been noticeably muted.

The strike on Thursday occurred in a village near Mir Ali, one of the main towns in the North Waziristan tribal area, said Pakistani intelligence officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Pakistan official: 19 killed in attack on Shiites

 Pakistan official: 19 killed in attack on Shiites
(Photo: Butt, AP)

Story Highlights

More than 20 people were wounded in the attack Sunday in
A suicide bomber driving a vehicle packed with explosives rammed into a bus
Radical Sunni Muslims consider Shiites , especially in Baluchistan

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — A car bomb targeting a bus carrying Shiite killed 19 people in southwest Pakistan on Sunday, officials and said.

Earlier Sunday, 21 tribal policemen believed to have been kidnapped by the Taliban were found shot dead in Pakistan’s troubled northwest tribal region, government officials said.

There were about whether the attack on the Shiites was carried out by a suicide bomber, or if the car bomb was detonated by remote control.

Pakistan has experienced a spike in killings over the last year by radical Sunni Muslims targeting Shiites, whom they consider heretics. The violence has been especially pronounced in Baluchistan province, where the latest attack occurred.

In addition to the 19 people killed in the bombing in Baluchistan’s Mastung district, 25 others were wounded, many of them critically, said Tufail Ahmed, a local political official. The blast destroyed the bus and damaged a nearby bus carrying Shiites.

Ahmed and a person who was riding in the second bus, Mohammed Ayan Danish, said the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

The bomber “rammed a into the first bus, which contained 43 pilgrims,” said Danish.

But Akbar Durrani, the in Baluchistan, said the explosion was caused by a car packed with explosives that was parked beside the road and detonated by remote control.

The pilgrims who were targeted were headed to Iran, a majority Shiite country that is a popular religious tourism destination, Ahmed said.

Shiites make up around 15 percent of Pakistan’s 190 million people. They are scattered around the country. The province of Baluchistan has the largest community, mainly made up of ethnic Hazaras, easily identified by their facial features, which resemble those of Central Asians.

Sunni extremists have long carried out attacks against Shiites in Pakistan. The sectarian campaign has stepped up in recent years, fueled mainly by the radical group Laskar-e-Jangvhi, aligned to Pakistani Taliban militants headquartered in the tribal region. More than 300 Shiites have been killed in Pakistan this year, according to Human Rights Watch.

The violence has pushed Baluchistan deeper into chaos. The province was already facing an armed insurgency by ethnic Baluch who frequently attack security forces and government facilities. Now the secessionist violence has been overtaken by increasingly bold attacks against Shiites.

The sectarian bloodshed adds another layer to the turmoil in Pakistan, where the government is fighting an insurgency by the Pakistani Taliban and where many fear Sunni hard-liners are gaining strength. Shiites and rights group say the government does little to protect Shiites and that militants are emboldened because they are believed to have links to Pakistan’s intelligence agencies.

The 21 tribal policemen who were shot dead were found by officials shortly after midnight Sunday in the Jabai area of Frontier Region Peshawar after being notified by one policeman who escaped, said Naveed Akbar Khan, a top political official in the area. Another policeman was found seriously wounded, Khan said.

The 23 policemen went missing before dawn Thursday when militants armed with rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons attacked two posts in Frontier Region Peshawar. Two policemen were killed in the attacks.

Militants lined the policemen up on a cricket pitch late Saturday night and gunned them down, said another local official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to reporters.

Also Sunday, two Pakistani army soldiers were killed by a roadside bomb in the North Waziristan tribal area, the main sanctuary for Taliban and al-Qaida militants in the country, security officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with official policy.