WORLD> Asia-Pacific
Car bombing kills 29 in Pakistan
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-12-06 14:14

Peshawar -- The death toll from an overnight car bombing rose to 29 in northwest Pakistan, unnerving a region already dangerously on edge following the attacks on India's commercial capital, police and doctors said Saturday.


Residents gather at the site of a bomb explosion in Peshawar December 5, 2008. A car bomb killed at least 29 people and wounded scores in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar on Friday, officials said. [Agencies]

About 100 people were also wounded Friday when the bomb went off near Peshawar's famed Storytellers Bazaar, wrecking a Shiite Muslim mosque and a hotel and setting a string of vehicles and shops ablaze, said Mohammed Khan, a local police official.

Television footage showed survivors frantically carrying bloodied victims through the rubble to private cars and ambulances as fire crews sought to douse the flames.

Neither the motive nor the culprits behind the blast were clear. But provincial government chief Haider Khan Hoti said "external forces" could be to blame, a comment understood in Pakistan to mean India.

Sahib Khan, a doctor at a main hospital said Saturday that they received 20 bodies after the blast, while another nine injured died overnight. He said some of the injured were still in critical condition.

Further adding to the tension, a suspected US missile strike reportedly killed three people in a stronghold of the Taliban and al-Qaida near the border with Afghanistan.

Escalating violence is destabilizing Pakistan's northwest just as the country faces accusations from archrival India that the gunmen behind the carnage in Mumbai last week were trained in Pakistan and steered by militants based there.

The provincial police chief, Malik Naveed Khan, said the bomb seemed to contain chemicals designed to spread fire.

Pakistan and the United States have stepped up operations against Taliban and al-Qaida strongholds in the northwest to curb mounting attacks launched from there on targets in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

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