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11 killed in election violence
ISLAMABAD—A suicide bomb killed an election candidate and nine other
people on Monday, while a political worker died in a clash between rival
parties as a wave of pre-poll violence intensified. The attacks raised
new fears about the security of the elections in one week’s time, with
candidates keeping a low profile since the assassination of opposition
leader Benazir Bhutto at a political rally in December.
Police said Monday’s bombing in the tribal region of North Waziristan,
bordering Afghanistan, targeted the convoy of a candidate named as Nisar
Ali as he travelled to a political meeting. “It was a suicide attack, a
miscreant rammed his car laden with explosives into the candidate’s
convoy,” a tribal police official told after the attack in the village
of Aidak, near the major town of Mir Ali.
“10 people were killed, including the candidate and an administration
official, while 13 others were wounded.” Officials said the candidate
was linked to the Awami National Party (ANP), an ethnic Pashtun
nationalist party. A suicide bomber killed 25 people at an ANP rally in
northwestern Pakistan on Saturday.
Pakistan has been hit by a wave of suicide attacks across the
nuclear-armed nation that has so far this year left nearly 100 people
dead, all blamed by the government on Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants.
The killing of ex-premier Bhutto has also been blamed on an Al-Qaeda-linked
militant commander based in the tribal region of South Waziristan. Her
killing forced the postponement of elections that were supposed to be in
January.
The spiralling violence in Pakistan caused US Defence Secretary Robert
Gates to warn a day earlier that the Taliban and Al-Qaeda pose a direct
threat to the Islamabad government. In a further illustration of the
challenge facing Pakistani authorities, a top Afghan Taliban commander,
Mullah Mansoor Dadullah, was captured and wounded Monday by security
forces in a southwestern village, police and the army said.
Opposition parties have accused the government of playing up security
threats to politicians in a bid to dampen campaigning in favour of
parties that favour President Pervez Musharraf, but rallies have
gathered pace in recent days. Lawyers across the country launched a
boycott of courts until the elections and held protests inside
courtrooms in major cities to call for the restoration of the country’s
deposed chief justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. Musharraf sacked
Chaudhry under a state of emergency in November. He remains under house
arrest. Later Monday hundreds of supporters of Musharraf’s key allies,
the former ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Q (PML-Q) party, arrived in a
fleet of buses in the capital and held a rally in front of parliament,
witnesses said.
Another former premier, Nawaz Sharif, accused the government of
“massive” attempts to rig the polls at a news conference in Lahore.
Meanwhile, two surveys by US-based groups said that the sympathy effect
of Bhutto’s death in a suicide and gun attack in the northern city of
Rawalpindi had boosted the chances of her Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)
in the election.
Fifty percent of Pakistanis said they would vote for the PPP, against 22
percent for Sharif’s party, said one poll by the International
Republican Institute released on Monday. The PML-Q were chosen by only
14 percent. The survey also found that 75 percent of Pakistanis wanted
Musharraf to quit. A separate poll released at the weekend by the Terror
Free Tomorrow organisation found that 36.7 percent of people said they
would vote for the PPP, 25.3 percent for Sharif’s grouping and 12
percent for the PML-Q.—Agencies
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