Two suicide bombers blew themselves up outside Pakistan’s main military arms factory yesterday, killing 45 people and deepening the security challenges facing the shaky coalition government.
The attackers struck almost simultaneously as a crowd of workers was streaming out of the huge factory complex in the northern town of Wah, near Islamabad. It is one of the country’s most sensitive installations.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, the second to rock Pakistan since Pervez Musharraf resigned as president on Monday and warned of further blasts if army operations near the Afghan border are not stopped.
“It’s a massive attack,” local police chief Nasir Durrani said. “Two men apparently blew themselves up outside the factory during a shift change. The bombers were on foot and they exploded themselves less than a minute apart.”
Local police official Sardar Shahbaz Hussain said 45 people were “confirmed dead” and about 70 wounded. State television gave the same toll.
The charred body of a bearded man, believed to be one of the bombers, lay in the road outside one of the gates. A severed leg, abandoned shoes and several mangled bicycles were scattered nearby.
Dozens of troops, police and military rescue workers in orange jackets milled around the scene.
Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani strongly condemned the attack and “directed the authorities to make efforts to expose the hidden hands behind the incident,” the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan news agency said.
A spokesman for Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, the umbrella group for the country’s Taliban militants, said they were responsible.
“Our bombers carried out today’s attack. It is in reaction to military operations in Swat and Bajaur,” spokesman Maulvi Omar said by telephone, referring to two northwestern regions where troops are fighting militants.
“Similar attacks will be carried out in other cities of Pakistan including Lahore, Islamabad and Rawalpindi,” he said.
The Pakistani Ordnance Factories at Wah is a cluster of about 20 industrial units producing artillery, tank and anti-aircraft ammunition for the Pakistani armed forces. It employs about 25,000 to 30,000 workers.
Factory worker Riaz Hussain said most of the victims were laborers who were joining the afternoon shift.
“I was working in the factory when I heard one blast and then another. They were huge,” he said. “Security people then immediately surrounded the place and we were not allowed to go outside.”
A rescue service official said a fleet of around 25 ambulances was needed to ferry the wounded to hospital.
“The blast took place as staff were leaving after finishing their day’s duty and it was very crowded,” said Zaheer Shah, of Edhi Rescue, Pakistan’s largest private charity.
The blasts came two days after a suicide bomber attacked a hospital in the northwestern town of Dera Ismail Khan on Tuesday, killing 30 people.
Pakistani forces have been fighting fierce battles for nearly two weeks with Taliban militants in Bajaur, a tribal region bordering Afghanistan. The government says more than 500 militants and 30 soldiers have been killed.
Gilani’s government is under massive international pressure to crack down on militants using safe havens in the rugged tribal belt to launch attacks on US and NATO forces in Afghanistan.
But bombings like yesterday’s attack here have added to public anger and accusations that Pakistan itself is suffering for its role in what many regard as “America’s war.”
About 1,000 people have died in a wave of militant suicide bombings since the siege and storming of the radical Red Mosque in Islamabad in July last year, in which at least 100 people died.
Eleven people, including a former minister, were arrested in Serbia on Friday over a train station disaster in which 16 people died. The concrete canopy of the newly renovated station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed on Nov. 1, 2024 in a disaster widely blamed on corruption and poor oversight. It sparked a wave of student-led protests and led to the resignation of then-Serbian prime minister Milos Vucevic and the fall of his government. The public prosecutor’s office in Novi Sad opened an investigation into the accident and deaths. In February, the public prosecutor’s office for organized crime opened another probe into
RISING RACISM: A Japanese group called on China to assure safety in the country, while the Chinese embassy in Tokyo urged action against a ‘surge in xenophobia’ A Japanese woman living in China was attacked and injured by a man in a subway station in Suzhou, China, Japanese media said, hours after two Chinese men were seriously injured in violence in Tokyo. The attacks on Thursday raised concern about xenophobic sentiment in China and Japan that have been blamed for assaults in both countries. It was the third attack involving Japanese living in China since last year. In the two previous cases in China, Chinese authorities have insisted they were isolated incidents. Japanese broadcaster NHK did not identify the woman injured in Suzhou by name, but, citing the Japanese
YELLOW SHIRTS: Many protesters were associated with pro-royalist groups that had previously supported the ouster of Paetongtarn’s father, Thaksin, in 2006 Protesters rallied on Saturday in the Thai capital to demand the resignation of court-suspended Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra and in support of the armed forces following a violent border dispute with Cambodia that killed more than three dozen people and displaced more than 260,000. Gathered at Bangkok’s Victory Monument despite soaring temperatures, many sang patriotic songs and listened to speeches denouncing Paetongtarn and her father, former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and voiced their backing of the country’s army, which has always retained substantial power in the Southeast Asian country. Police said there were about 2,000 protesters by mid-afternoon, although
MOGAMI-CLASS FRIGATES: The deal is a ‘big step toward elevating national security cooperation with Australia, which is our special strategic partner,’ a Japanese official said Australia is to upgrade its navy with 11 Mogami-class frigates built by Japan’s Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Australian Minister for Defence Richard Marles said yesterday. Billed as Japan’s biggest defense export deal since World War II, Australia is to pay US$6 billion over the next 10 years to acquire the fleet of stealth frigates. Australia is in the midst of a major military restructure, bolstering its navy with long-range firepower in an effort to deter China. It is striving to expand its fleet of major warships from 11 to 26 over the next decade. “This is clearly the biggest defense-industry agreement that has ever