• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Suicide bomber kills Pakistan parliamentarian

MINGORA, Pakistan
Tue Dec 1, 2009 9:13am EST
Security forces stand guard at the site of a suicide bomb attack in Mingora, located in Pakistan's Swat Valley, December 1, 2009. REUTERS/Hazart Ali Bacha

Security forces stand guard at the site of a suicide bomb attack in Mingora, located in Pakistan's Swat Valley, December 1, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Hazart Ali Bacha

MINGORA, Pakistan (Reuters) - A teenage suicide bomber killed an anti-Taliban provincial lawmaker in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday after walking into the official's house along with guests and blowing himself up.

World

More than a dozen people were wounded in the attack in Swat valley, police said.

The army, battling a Taliban insurgency, launched what it said was a successful offensive in Swat in late April that cleared most of the area, but it still faces pockets of resistance.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan is under growing U.S. pressure to crack down harder on militants in border areas to help it fight the Taliban in Afghanistan, where President Barack Obama is expected to send 30,000 more troops to try to put down an insurgency.

That may be difficult because Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari faces growing calls to relinquish many of his powers and analysts say it's up to the country's powerful military to decide whether to intensify the fight against militants.

The slain lawmaker, Shamsher Ali, was a member of the Awami National Party, part of a coalition that rules the North West Frontier Province. Police said two of his brothers were wounded in the attack, one critically.

"People were coming to exchange Eid greetings with him when a man came and blew himself up," his relative Farooq Khan said, referring to the Muslim holy festival which ended on Monday.

Police said the bomber's head and parts of his body were found in the reception area of Ali's home. Militants had destroyed another one of his homes earlier this year.

Security forces have killed more than 2,000 fighters in the Swat Valley, about 120 km (80 miles) northwest of Islamabad, in the offensive, according to the army. There has been no independent verification of that casualty estimate.

Hundreds have been killed in retaliatory bombings since Pakistani forces attacked the militant stronghold of South Waziristan, part of a tribal region seen as a global militant hub, in October. Many militants were believed to have fled.

The leader of the Taliban in Swat and self-styled cleric Fazlullah telephoned the BBC last month to say he had escaped to Afghanistan and would soon launch raids against the army. The army said in July he was believed to have been wounded.

The attack that killed Ali occurred in a village that was a former headquarters of Fazlullah.

(Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Jeremy Laurence)



More from Reuters

Photo

Honda expands airbag recall as more Toyotas probed

TOKYO/DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co said it would recall another 440,000 cars around the world for faulty airbags as rival Toyota Motor Corp faced further probes over its largest-ever safety crisis. | Video

A worker walks on steel frames at a construction site in central Beijing January 27, 2010. REUTERS/Loic Hofstedt
Analysis:

China's boom may lead to bust

The housing market is becoming the investment of choice for the Chinese, which is making policymakers very nervous.  Full Article