A suicide bomber killed seven people near a major air force complex in northwest Pakistan yesterday, while a car bomb wounded 15 others in the region, the latest in a surge of militant attacks this month.
The bloodshed has coincided with the run-up and first week of a major army offensive in a Taliban and al-Qaeda stronghold along the Afghan border. More than 170 people have died in recent weeks as the insurgents have shown they can strike in a variety of ways and places in the nuclear-armed, US-allied nation.
The Pakistan Aeronautical Complex at Kamra is the country’s major air force maintenance and research hub.
Some foreign military experts have mentioned it as a possible place to keep planes that can carry nuclear warheads, but the army, which does not reveal where its nuclear-related facilities are, strongly denies that the facility is tied to the program in any way.
A lone suicide bomber on a bicycle blew himself up at a checkpoint on a road leading to the complex, around 50km from the capital, Islamabad. Police officer Akbar Abbas blamed the Taliban for the attack.
The seven dead included two troops. Some 13 people were wounded.
Hours later, a car bomb exploded in the parking lot of a recreational facility in Peshawar, the main city in the northwest.
Fifteen people were wounded. The facility includes a restaurant, a swimming pool, a health club and a marriage hall.
“It is part of the violence we are seeing across Pakistan these days,” said Mian Iftikhar Hussain, the region’s information minister.
There have been at least nine major militant attacks this month, most against police or army targets.
Some have been explosions, while others have involved teams of gunmen staging raids. In one of the most brazen attacks, gunmen attacked the army headquarters close to the capital and held hostages inside the complex for 22 hours.
Pakistan is under intense pressure to eliminate Islamist militant groups — sheltering in its northwest — that attack US and NATO troops in Afghanistan. The military has battled them in various districts, losing hundreds of soldiers, but questions remain about its overall strategic commitment to the fight.
It began its current offensive in South Waziristan seven days ago.
The army has previously moved into South Waziristan three times since 2004. Each time it has suffered high casualties and signed peace deals that left insurgents with effective control of the region. Western officials say al-Qaeda now uses it and neighboring North Waziristan as an operations and training base.
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