Tag Archive: pakistan

pakistan

India on Tuesday accused Pakistan of not being serious in punishing the culprits of the Mumbai terrorĀ attack and said even the terror infrastructure which facilitated such attacks was intact.

“Pakistan is not serious about prosecuting and punishing those responsible for perpetrating the Mumbai attack. They are still in Pakistani soil,” he told a press conference when asked to comment about the kind of response by Pakistan to the dossiers given by India.

Chidambaram also said the terror infrastructure that helped attacks like the one in Mumbai to be carried out, was intact across the border.

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Slamming Pakistan for the expanding terrorist footprints on its soil, India on Thursday said it had clear evidence that the Mumbai attack was planned and launched by the western neighbour, and this had strained the peace process.

The Defence Ministry, in its annual report for 2008-09 released here on Thursday, said: “The terrorist attack on Mumbai in November 2008 and the clear evidence that the attack was planned and launched by Pakistan have thereafter led to a pause in the (peace) process” between New Delhi and Islamabad.

The 220-page report said the fact that many of the extremist outfits in Pakistan had known record of terrorist attacks against India amounted to a security challenge with serious implications for the country.

“The continuing links of these organisations (terrorists) with organs of the Pakistan State adds greater complexities and dangers to the evolving situation confronting us,” it said.

“Strengthening of our security apparatus, both internally and on our frontiers is, therefore, a national priority of the highest order. Pakistan’s history of military and quasi-military adventurism underscrore the seriousness of the threat we face,” the Defence Ministry added.

It also noted that the year had witnessed a marked rise in terrorist incidents all over Pakistan including capital Islamabad, apart from the previously affected areas of FATA and NWFP.

The Defence Ministry said the unimpeded growth of extremist and terrorist organisations in Pakistan was marked by an increase in ceasefire violations, continued infiltration across the LoC, as also major terrorist attacks.

“All this placed an immense strain on the India-Pakistan Composite Dialogue process,” it added.

On Afghanistan, the Defence Ministry said the deteriorating internal security there and the resurgence of Taliban, Al Qaeda and other terror groups since 2006 constituted a threat to stability of the entire South and Central Asian region.

“The terrorist attack on the Indian Embassy in Kabul on July 7, 2008, in which five Embassy personnel and a large number of Afghan nationals were killed, demonstrated that India’s efforts at reconstruction and development were implacably opposed by these groups,” it said.

The report said security in southern and eastern Afghanistan was closely related to developments in the borders with Pakistan, where sanctuaries provided the bases from which these groups operated.

India said the convergence of extremist and terrorist groups in Afghanistan with those operating out of Pakistan, often with the patronage of its State agencies, had consequently contributed immensely to the deterioration of India’s external security environment.

Referring to the US-led global war on terror, the Defence Ministry said after a policy review in March 2009, Washington announced a comprehensive new strategy for Afghanistan and Pakistan, emphasising a regional approach.

“In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai, the US goal is to disrupt, dismantle and defeat Al Qaeda and its safe havens in Pakistan and to prevent their return to Pakistan or Afghanistan,”

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A suicide car bomber targeted buildings housing police and intelligence agency offices in eastern Pakistan on Wednesday, killing about 40 and wounding more than 200 in one of the deadliest such blasts in the country this year, officials said.(Watch Live News on IBN7 Click Here)

The attack, which was followed by gunfire, was the third major strike in the city of Lahore in recent months, and it came amid worries of retaliation from Taliban militants facing a major Pakistani military offensive in the northwest.

Lahore is a major cultural metropolis near the Indian border, and assaults there have heightened fears that militancy in Pakistan is spreading well beyond the northwest region bordering Afghanistan.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s bombing.

Raja Riaz, a senior minister in the Punjab province government, told reporters that about 30 people died. Fayyaz Ranjha, a senior health official, told state-run Pakistan Television that the attack had wounded 116 people.

The explosion was so powerful it sheared the walls off buildings in a main business district. TV footage from the scene showed injured bystanders while emergency workers carried at least one person covered by a blanket to an ambulance.

Police official Mohammed Ashfaq said it was a suicide car bomber, and that the attack occurred outside the office of the emergency police service in Lahore. TV footage showed the nearby office of the Inter-Services Intelligence agency also was damaged.

Ashfaq said gunshots were heard immediately after the blast. An AP reporter saw dozens of troops entering the damaged building of the spy agency to supervise the rescue work, while gunshots were also heard from inside the building even one hour after the blast.

Earlier this year, a group of gunmen attacked Sri Lanka’s visiting cricket team in the heart of Lahore, killing six police officers and a driver and wounding several of the players.

A few weeks later, gunmen raided a police academy on the city’s outskirts, leaving at least 12 dead during an eight-hour standoff with security forces including army troops. Pakistani Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud claimed responsibility for that attack.

The military is waging an offensive against Taliban militants in the northwest Swat Valley, a monthlong operation the army says has already left some 1,100 suspected militants dead. The offensive has spurred fears that the Taliban could stage revenge assaults.

A car bomb has exploded in Pakistan’s north-western city of Peshawar, killing at least 11 people and injuring many others, police say.

The explosion occurred in a busy street in the densely populated Kashkal area, as a school bus passed by, they said.

At least 25 people were injured in the blast – two were said to be in a critical condition.

Earlier officials in Islamabad said at least 10 people were killed by a suspected US drone in north Pakistan.

The unmanned aircraft fired missiles at a building and a vehicle in the North Waziristan tribal region.

The officials said two foreign militants were among those killed, and several more people were injured.