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Five killed in attack on Pakistan Shiite gathering, 90 hurt
Reuters - November 25, 2012
Sunni hard-liners threatened to strike hard this weekend, an important one in the Shiite religious calendar, prompting authorities to halt cellphone coverage in several areas to prevent bombings triggered by remote control.
Authorities have also restricted motorcycle travel, hoping to deprive suicide bombers of one mode of transportation.
The wounded were carried away in the northwestern city of Dera Ismail Khan, where a bomb targeting Shiites killed at least seven people, including four children, on Saturday.
Pakistan's Taliban, who are focused on battling the state but are also allied with Sunni sectarian groups, claimed responsibility for both attacks.
"For Interior Minister of Pakistan Rehman Malik, who blocked mobile phones across the country and banned motorbikes, you can't stop our activities against the Shiite community and security forces," Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehasan said by telephone from an undisclosed location.
"We will keep continuing our activities and this is a failure of security forces, police and army that we have made successful attacks in Dera Ismail Khan."
Past attacks during the religious event have killed large numbers of Shiites. Sunday's bomb, planted in a shop near a street market, also wounded five security officials, said senior police official Malik Mushtaq.
Doctors at a hospital in Dera Ismail Khan said five people were killed and 90 wounded. "There is a lack of ambulances and not enough hospital beds," said one. "People brought many of the injured to the hospital on rickshaws."
Hardline Sunni groups, which are becoming increasingly dangerous, have vowed to carry out more attacks as the Shiite mourning month of Muharram comes to a climax on Sunday.
Security officials say organizations such as Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) are stepping up attacks on Shiites, who they regard as non-believers, in a bid to destabilize nuclear-armed, US ally Pakistan and establish a Sunni theocracy.
Al Qaeda, which is close to LeJ, pushed Iraq to the brink of a sectarian civil war several years ago with large-scale suicide bombings of Shiites.
More than 300 Shiites have been killed in Pakistan so far this year in sectarian conflict, according to human rights groups. The campaign is gathering pace in rural as well as urban areas such as Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city. Shiites account for up to 20 percent of this nation of 180 million.
The growing death toll has discouraged some Shiites from taking part in processions this year during one of their most sacred rituals, when people flagellate themselves with chains and other items to commemorate the martyrdom of the grandson of Islam's prophet, who was killed during the battle of Karbala.
"If I were to compare with last year, the fear has definitely increased," said Sadia Fatema, 28. "Just last night me and my mother were asking my father and brother if they really had to go to the procession. We are worried."
Others say the pressure has made Shiites stand up to Sunni hardliners. "There is fear, but there is also anger and defiance among Shiites," said one, who asked not to be named. "Shiites never felt like a minority in Pakistan but now they are slowly being turned into a real minority. And Shiites will not let this happen."
Washington, a critical source of financial aid for cash-strapped Pakistan, has been pressuring the South Asian nation to crack down on militants based in tribal areas who cross the border to attack American-led forces in Afghanistan.
Pakistan, meanwhile, faces major domestic security challenges from a wide range of groups, including the Taliban, who capitalize on issues such as unemployment, official corruption and poverty to boost recruitment.
A series of army offensives has failed to break the back of militant groups based along the border with Afghanistan.
"Our children are being killed but the government is powerless," complained Shiite Amina Bokhari. "What is the purpose of this security they claim to give us?"
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