Top Afghan diplomat abducted in Pakistan

Mon Sep 22, 2008 4:27pm EDT
 
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By Kamran Haider

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Gunmen kidnapped Afghanistan's top diplomat to Pakistan on Monday after killing his driver, underscoring worsening security in the nuclear-armed country two days after a suicide bomber killed 53 people.

British Airways said it had suspended flights to Pakistan because of security fears after the Saturday evening truck-bomb attack on Islamabad's Marriott Hotel.

Arabiya television reported that the little-known group Fedayeen Islam (Partisans of Islam) claimed responsibility for the Marriott bombing, Islamabad's worst attack, in a tape played over the telephone to its correspondent in the Pakistan capital.

Arabiya said the group made several demands, including that Pakistan stop cooperating with the United States. It said the authenticity of the tape could not be verified and the group is not known to have claimed other attacks.

Before the group claimed responsibility, Pakistan's government had said it expected investigations into the bombing would lead to al Qaeda and Taliban militants in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas on the Afghan border.

A U.S. counterterrorism official, contacted by email at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. base, said al Qaeda or an affiliated group remained prime suspects in the bombing.

Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said President Asif Ali Zardari, as well as the prime minister and army commander, had been due to attend a dinner at the hotel on the night of the attack but the venue was changed on the prime minister's advice.

The Czech ambassador and at least three other foreigners were among those killed in the blast, which wounded 266 people and which security officials said bore the hallmarks of al Qaeda.

The blast reinforced investors' negative attitudes after months of political uncertainty, a currency dealer said.

The beleaguered Pakistani rupee sank to a new low, trading at 78.55 to the dollar before closing at 78.21/28. The rupee has lost 21.2 percent against the dollar this year.

The Afghan consul general in the northwestern city of Peshawar, Abdul Khaliq Farahi, was seized after gunmen ambushed his car and killed his driver. Gunmen opened fire on a U.S. diplomat in the city last month.

"Masked gunmen intercepted his vehicle and took him away after killing his driver," said consulate official Noor Mohammad Takal. "It's a very serious incident. The Pakistani government needs to give security to diplomats."

Pakistan said it was taking all measures to recover Farahi, who is due to take over as ambassador to Pakistan, safely.

"END MILITARY INTERVENTION"

Shortly before the attack in Peshawar, a British Airways spokesman said the airline had suspended its six flights a week to Pakistan while the company reviewed security.  Continued...

 

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