Sectarian attack kills at least 18 in Pakistan

By Jennifer Rowland Share

In cold blood: Gunmen wearing Pakistani military uniforms ambushed four passenger buses carrying mostly Shi'a Muslims in the Kohistan district of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province on Tuesday, ordering the passengers off the bus and killing at least 18 of them (NYTAPCNNTelAJEETReutersLATBBC). The commander of the banned Sunni militant group Jundallah, Ahmed Marwat, contacted the media soon after the attack to claim responsibility on behalf of his organization. 

Pakistani Finance Secretary Abdul Wajid Rana on Tuesday suggested that the United States will soon release money owed to Pakistan under the Coalition Support Fund (CSF) (ETDawn). Pakistan had been slated to receive $1.3 billion from the CSF this year, but the closing of NATO supply routes through Pakistan resulted in the money being withheld for several months. The Pakistani rupee hit a record low of 90.97 against the dollar on Monday, as the State Bank of Pakistan made its first installment of $400 million to repay IMF loans, and officials told National Assembly members that the country's debt had reached $130 billion (The NewsDawn).

An email from the U.S. security think tank Stratfor obtained and published by the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks on Monday alleges that there were "Mid to senior level ISI and Pak Mil with one retired Pak Mil General that had knowledge of OBL [Osama bin Laden] arrangements and safehouse" (TelETBBC). Meanwhile, some residents of Abbottabad, where bin Laden was found and killed last May, want a girls school built on the site of the terrorist leader's compound, which was razed this weekend (ET).

Stick to the plan

U.S. officials on Monday defended the Obama administration's decision to stay the course in Afghanistan despite the protests and attacks on NATO personnel over the last week, and the growing unpopularity of the war at home (APBloombergNPR, McClatchyReuters). Pentagon officials said the "cowardly attacks" will not deter the United States from pursuing its goal of improving security conditions in Afghanistan, and spokesman George Little pointed out that U.S. troops "work alongside thousands of Afghans every single day."

The United Nations pulled international staff from their office in the northeastern province of Kunduz on Monday, a day after protesters attempted to storm the compound in which the office is located (WSJ).

A nation's pride

Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousaf Raza Gilani on Monday announced that Pakistani filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy would receive a civil award for becoming the first Pakistani to win an Oscar (AP). Obaid-Chinoy received the prestigious award for her documentary "Saving Face," which follows a London-based surgeon who travels to Pakistan to do reconstructive surgeries on female victims of acid attacks. 

-- Jennifer Rowland

HASHAM AHMED/AFP/Getty Images

 

MARTY MARTEL

4:39 PM ET

February 28, 2012

Sunni Islamic fundamentalist State of Pakistan

Pakistan’s non-Muslim minority population went down from almost 22% in 1947 to just 2% by 1952.

After vanquishing other religious minorities like Hindus, Sikhs, Parsis, Buddhists, Christians and Jains, now it is the turn of their fellow Islamic Shiites for elimination by Pakistan’s Sunni majority.

 

UMAR7

12:29 PM ET

March 15, 2012

Just wrong.....

BAGHDAD, FEB 24 - Simultaneous early morning attacks on mostly Shi'ite targets across Iraq killed at least 60 people and wounded dozens on Thursday in one of the bloodiest days of violence since U.S. troops pulled out in mid-December.

The attacks that appeared to pitch al Qaeda-linked Sunni Muslim insurgents against Shi'ites raised fears of a return to the widespread sectarian carnage that tore Iraq apart and cost thousands of lives in 2006 and 2007.

The violence breaks weeks of relative calm as Shi'ite Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and Sunni leaders have sought to resolve a political crisis that threatened to unravel their power-sharing agreement following the U.S. withdrawal.

At least 32 people were killed in blasts in Baghdad where 10 explosions tore through mainly Shi'ite neighborhoods during rush hour and other attacks targeted police patrols, commuters and crowds gathered in shopping areas.

"We were sitting at a restaurant having soup for breakfast when the bomb exploded. I lost consciousness and then saw smoke and dust when I came to. I saw people and body parts everywhere," police officer Ahmed Kadhim told Reuters.

Kadhim suffered shrapnel wounds to his left leg and back when a car bomb exploded near a restaurant killing six people and wounding 18 in Baghdad's northern Kadhimiya district.

The interior ministry blamed al Qaeda and affiliated armed groups for the attacks it said were an attempt to show that Iraq's security situation remained unstable.

The blasts hit just weeks before Baghdad plans to host an Arab League summit, which has been postponed because of regional turmoil and acrimony between Iraq's Shi'ite-led government and some Sunni Gulf states.

Holding a successful summit at the end of March would help Iraq restore its place in the Arab World since the U.S. withdrawal and help allay Sunni Gulf States worries over Iran's influence over Iraq's Shi'ite government.

"The attacks aimed to spark sectarian strife among the Iraqi people, and to prevent the Arab League meeting from being held," Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi said.

DOZENS OF BLASTS

More than a dozen blasts and attacks hit other cities across Iraq from Mosul in the north to Hilla, south of Baghdad, many of them targeting police.

The violence was aimed at Shi'ite neighborhoods but also against security forces, a frequent target of Sunni insurgents. Iraqi officials had predicted such groups would try to stir sectarian tensions with attacks after American forces went home.

While violence has ebbed since the height of the war, Sunni insurgents affiliated to al Qaeda are still capable of large-scale assaults. Some rival Shi'ite militias have said they will cease fighting since the U.S. withdrawal.

Islamic State of Iraq, an umbrella group for al Qaeda-linked insurgents in Iraq, has claimed responsibility for recent large attacks on the capital, including a December 22 wave of bombings that killed at least 71 people.

In Thursday's violence, one car bomb in the capital killed at least nine people and wounded 27 in the upmarket Karrada neighborhood, hurling shrapnel into the next street and blowing out glass from nearby buildings.

Witnesses saw at four wrecked cars full of shrapnel and bloodied seats near an ice-cream shop at the site of another blast.

In at least three Shi'ite neighborhoods in Baghdad, nine policemen were killed, and in the capital's northwestern Kadhimiya district, a car bomb killed six people when it struck a street lined with restaurants.

In the biggest attack outside the capital, a car bomb killed seven people and wounded 33 in the town of Balad, north of Baghdad.

Iraq's political crisis erupted after Maliki moved against two senior members of the Sunni-backed Iraqiya political bloc shortly after the U.S. troop withdrawal in December, prompting a walkout by Iraqiya lawmakers that lasted until late January.

Tensions eased as Sunni, Shi'ite and Kurdish blocs tried to negotiate an end to the crisis. But a week ago a panel of judges detailed 150 attacks they said were carried out by death squads under Sunni Vice President Tareq al-Hashemi's command. Maliki sought Hashemi's arrest in December.

Hashemi, who has taken refuge in the autonomous region of Kurdistan, has denied accusations made against him, dismissing them as part of a plot to destroy Maliki's opponents.

The crisis was followed by a wave of attacks in December and January on Shi'ite neighborhoods, including a suicide bombing on a Shi'ite funeral procession that killed 31 in Baghdad and an attack on Shi'ite pilgrims that left 53 dead in Basra.

Violence had ebbed until Sunday when a suicide car bomber killed 19 people in an attack on a Baghdad police academy.

thanks
Microsoft project 2010

 

MAXIMB

12:10 PM ET

March 19, 2012

Not really. Joe Biden

Not really. Joe Biden doesn't have executive experience, not that this is a REAL issue (come on, there is nothing in the requirements for the POTUS that says you MUST have exec experience, and I wish that people would stop harping about this non issue.) As far as I know, he was a lawyer for a brief period before being elected to the senate at 30, and he was not qualified for service in Vietnam due to health issues. John McCain led men during his tenure in the military; he was a lieutenant commander of the Navy, so this gives him some executive experience. As far as foreign policy, I would say that he and John have the same amount of experience, since they've both been in politics for a while..

"Is rio orange war always comparateur forfait mobile inevitable ?"
MaximB