One killed, seven injured in Pakistan roadside bomb (Agencies) Updated: 2004-07-24 15:07
A roadside bomb exploded near a vehicle carrying religious students in the
southern city of Karachi on Saturday, killing one person and injuring seven
others, police said.
It was not immediately clear who targeted the pickup truck, which belonged to
Jamia Rashidia, one the main Islamic schools in Pakistan, deputy police
inspector General Tariq Jamil said.
"Bomb disposal experts, after examining the damaged vehicle, have confirmed
that it was a bomb which was probably detonated by remote control," Jamil said.
Jamil identified the dead man as Mohammed Azam, an electrician at the school.
The injured were all students and teachers from the seminary.
Police discounted initial accounts that the explosion occurred inside the
vehicle.
Senior police investigator Akbar Arrien said it was a remotely controlled
bomb, but would not say who had targeted the vehicle.
He said the blast also damaged another nearby car and injured its driver.
Majib ur-Rahman, 40, a teacher who was injured in the blast, said he was
reading a newspaper when ``something exploded'' near their pickup truck.
"I do not know what happened after the blast. But when I opened my eyes, I
found myself on a hospital bed," he said.
Rahman and other injured victims were in stable condition, doctors said.
Karachi, Pakistan's largest city with a population of 14 million, has been
the scene of several attacks against foreigners, minority Christians and Shiite
Muslims in recent months, mostly blamed on Islamic militants who want President
Gen. Pervez Musharraf to end the country's support for the United States' war on
terror.
Musharraf, who made Pakistan a key ally of the United States in its war on
terror after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in America, escaped an assassination
attempt in Karachi in April 2002 when an outlawed militant group tried to blow
up his car by detonating a bomb on a road where his motorcade passed.
On May 31, a suspected suicide bomber blew himself up inside a Shiite Muslim
mosque in the city, killing 18 people and wounding dozens of others.
On June 10, suspected Islamic militants with assault rifles and bombs
attacked the motorcade of Lt. Gen. Ahsan Saleem Hayat, Karachi's top general,
killing 10 people, but missing Hayat.
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