Perilous Times
Bomb rocks Pakistan's largest city killing 15
By SHAKIL ADIL
The Associated Press
Thursday, November 11, 2010; 3:49 PM
KARACHI, Pakistan -- Militants attacked a police compound in the heart
of Pakistan's largest city on Thursday with a hail of gunfire and a
massive car bomb, leveling the building and killing at least 15 people,
authorities and witnesses said.
The gang of around six gunmen managed to penetrate a high-security area
of Karachi that is home to the U.S Consulate, two luxury hotels and the
offices of regional leaders. While no stranger to extremist violence,
Karachi has not witnessed this kind of organized assault in recent
years.
It was the first major attack against a government target outside the
northwestern tribal regions for several months, showing the reach of
Islamist militants seeking to overthrow the U.S.-allied government
despite efforts to crack down on them over the last three years.
The gunmen first opened fire on the offices of the Crime Investigation
Department before detonating a huge car bomb, said Sindh Home Minister
Zulfiqar Mirza. The building has a detention facility that was believed
to be holding criminals, and possibly militants.
The CID takes the lead in hunting down terrorists in Karachi. Earlier
this week, the agency arrested six members of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, an
al-Qaida linked group blamed for several high profile attacks in recent
years. The suspects were presented before a court earlier Thursday.
The blast could be heard several miles (kilometers) away in the city of
14 million people. It destroyed much of the multistory police building,
damaged nearby houses and left a 10-feet (three meter) wide crater in
the road. The U.S. Consulate was around a mile (1.5 kilometers) away,
but was undamaged.
"We heard different kinds of firing for several minutes and then a
deafening explosion," said Ali Hussain, who was covered in dust. "The
roof of our house collapsed."
Bloodied and dazed victims were taken to ambulances, some of them
children pulled from the debris. Security officers searching through
mangled bricks and iron looking for survivors late into the night.
Sindh government spokeswoman Sharmila Farooqi said 15 people, including
five police officers, were killed. About 100 people were injured.
Islamist militants with bases in the northwest close to Afghanistan
began targeting the state in earnest in 2007.
Many thousands of people, most of them civilians, have been killed in
suicide attacks against government, police and Western targets, as well
religious minorities.
The government has declared war on the militants, and the army has
moved into several areas in the northwest. But the insurgents have
proved to be remarkably resilient, drawing on networks across the
country inspired or allied to al-Qaida, which is itself headquartered
in the northwest.
While militant groups often claim responsibility for the attacks, some
Muslim political parties and leaders, angry at the U.S. role in
Afghanistan, allege American involvement, hampering the fight.