Zee News
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November 21, 2009
         
PoK attacker identified as Baitullah Mehsud's man
Updated on Saturday, June 27, 2009, 18:25 IST
Islamabad, June 27: The suicide bomber, who carried out the first-ever suicide bombing in Pakistan- occupied Kashmir, was on Saturday identified as a Taliban militant from Waziristan, with media reports saying the incident could trigger an intra-militant fratricide.

The attack has apparently rattled the Pakistani leadership, which has reacted angrily saying such attempts will not destruct the security forces from carrying out their mission to bring stability to the restive NWFP and wipe out the Taliban from the region.

But the attack has triggered an alarm keeping in view the presence of large numbers of other militant groups in and around Muzaffarabad, the capital of PoK.

"The Kashmir area has a sizeable military presence, given its disputed status with India. The potential for attack is immense. Such a development could also bring extremist forces still based in Kashmir into the conflict and thus make it even more complicated than it already is," The News daily said in an editorial comment.

The bomber has been identified as Qadir, the son of Abdur Rahim, hailing from the Waziristan tribal region, PoK Prime Minister Sardar Yaqoob Khan told the region's assembly.

The area targeted by the bomber had barracks occupied by the 'Azad Kashmir Regiment', whose personnel are participating in the operation against the Taliban in Swat and nearby areas.

Other officials said 150 suspects had been arrested in a crackdown following the attack in Muzaffarabad. Among those who were arrested are suspected Afghan nationals and persons belonging to the North West Frontier Province.

The bomber, described by witnesses as a youth aged about 18, detonated his explosives in a residential area for junior officers of the Pakistan Army. Two soldiers were killed and three more injured in the blast.

The outlawed Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it was carried out to give a message that the group had not been affected by air strikes and shelling on militant hideouts in Waziristan.

There is a sizeable presence of cadres of banned militants groups, including the Lashker-e-Taiba, in PoK.

LeT operative Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, currently facing trial in an anti-terror court for alleged involvement in the Mumbai attacks, was arrested during a raid near Muzaffarabad in December last year.

Bureau Report


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