Bloodshed, Political Fight Plague Pakistan
As Suicide Attacks Kill Dozens, One Of Government Coalition Members Threatens Pullout
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In this picture released by Pakistan People's Party, Pakistan's ruling party leaders Asif Ali Zardari, left, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, center, and former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif arrive for a meeting, Aug. 19, 2008 in Islamabad, Pakistan. (AP/Pakistan People's Party)
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Pakistani lawyers chant slogan during a rally demanding to restore the deposed judges, Aug. 21, 2008 in Lahore, Pakistan. (AP Photo/K.M.Chaudary)
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Lawyers hold portraits of deposed chief justice Iftikhar Mohammad Chaudhry and chant slogan at a rally to celebrate President Pervez Musharraf's resignation in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 19, 2008. Pakistan's law minister said that the government had not struck an immunity deal with Musharraf, who resigned this week as the nation's president in the face of possible impeachment. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)
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Pervez Musharraf dominated Pakistan for years after seizing power in a 1999 military coup, making the country a key strategic ally of the U.S. by supporting the war on terror. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)
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Pakistani security officials examine the site of suicide bombing at a gate of Pakistan's ordinance factory in Wah, a garrison city about 20 miles west of the capital Islamabad, Pakistan on Aug. 21, 2008. (AP Photo)
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Play CBS Video Video Pakistan's President Resigns President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan resigns amid calls leave office. Musharraf's alliance with the United States in the war on terror will likely highlight his legacy. Allen Pizzey reports.
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Timeline Musharraf's March Key events in President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's command of Pakistan's army and his presidency.
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Fast Facts Pakistan Learn about the people, economy and history.
A Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the attack, one of the bloodiest yet in Pakistan's intensifying war with insurgent groups that are also destabilizing Afghanistan.
The bombers struck at two different gates just as workers were leaving the sprawling arms facility in Wah, a garrison city 20 miles west of the capital, Islamabad.
Rana Tanveer, who was working at a bank about 200 yards from one of the gates where a bomber struck, said he was among the first to reach the scene.
"All around the gate I saw blood and human flesh. People helped the injured and took them in their cars and even on motorbikes to the hospital," he told The Associated Press. "Seven or eight people were already dead and another 10 people were breathing their last."
Tanvir Lodhi, a spokesman for Pakistan Ordnance Factories, said 59 people were killed. Mohammed Azhar, a hospital official, said 70 others were wounded.
Among more than a dozen bodies seen by an AP Television News reporter at the hospital were two wearing uniforms, though an army spokesman said he had no information that security forces were among the dead.
Pakistani forces are involved in an escalating battle with Islamic extremists in two nearby regions of the country's violence-plagued northwest, despite government efforts to negotiate peace with extremist groups.
Last month, Pakistan's security services warned that a group of suicide bombers would fan out across the country in the coming weeks to target important locations. At least 11 militants were arrested then, including five who were trained suicide bombers, during a raid in Lahore, Pakistan's second largest city, says CBS News reporter Farhan Bokhari.
"There are many indications to suggest that more attacks are planned. Pakistan could face a lot of bloodshed as it tries to deal with a very difficult problem," said a Western diplomat in Islamabad who spoke to CBS News on condition of anonymity.
Maulvi Umar, a spokesman for Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, a militant umbrella group, said the suicide bombings were revenge for airstrikes in Bajur, a militant stronghold near the Afghan border.
Umar said militants would carry out similar attacks in other major cities, including Islamabad and the southern port metropolis of Karachi, unless the military halts its operations.
"Only innocent people die when the Pakistan army carries out airstrikes in Bajur or Swat," he said, referring to a mountain valley where the army has vowed to clear out militants who have kidnapped and killed police and troops and burned girls' schools.
"If the army is really fond of fighting, it should send ground forces to see how we fight," Umar told AP by telephone from an undisclosed location.
Regional police Chief Nasir Durrani said the bomber struck as workers were streaming out after a shift change at the weapons complex, Pakistan's largest.
"There are two torn bodies lying there which we believe are those of the suicide bombers," Durrani said.
Soldiers and police later sealed off the area and prevented reporters from approaching. Television footage showed workers struggling to lift a blackened corpse onto a stretcher. Crows as well as forensic teams picked through the scraps of flesh and scattered shoes.
Durrani said experts would try to reconstruct the bombers' faces to try to identify them.
At the hospital, relatives searched frantically for loved ones as doctors worked to save those most seriously injured.
A young man who gave his name as Mohammad Asif stood wailing after identifying the lifeless body of his 60-year-old father in an ambulance.
"He was a humble man ... What wrong did he do to anyone? Why was he punished? These cruel people have taken away the great shadow of my father," Asif said.
The bombers managed to enter the cantonment area of the town undetected, but did not penetrate the tightly controlled weapons complex, which houses about a dozen factories.
According to the army, the factories produce rifles, machine guns and ammunition as well as grenades, and tank and artillery shells. Abbas said the perimeter is guarded by a dedicated paramilitary force.
Experts have suggested that facilities related to Pakistan's secretive nuclear weapons program are located in the Wah area, possibly including a uranium enrichment plant. Abbas insisted the complex attacked on Thursday was producing only conventional weapons.
Meanwhile, one of the government's main coalition partners threatened Thursday to quit unless judges fired by former President Pervez Musharraf are quickly reinstated - dashing hopes that Musharraf's departure would end the nation's turmoil.
The two main parties - traditional rivals united primarily in their hatred of Musharraf - also diverge on who should succeed him as president and whether the former strongman should face trial.
The coalition's biggest bloc, the Pakistan People's Party, already appears to be lining up smaller parties in parliament to keep control of the government if the party led by former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif pulls out of the coalition.
"The future of this coalition is linked to the restoration of judges," Sharif's spokesman Sadiqul Farooq told The Associated Press. "If the judges are not restored, we will prefer to sit on opposition benches."
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- for all those conspiracy theorists..the death of a female politican..will escalate into a global war of biblical proprotions.. i thought it was either hillary or rice..but i guess it might be Benazir Bhutto.....
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- now when pakistan is ran by islamic fanatics i fear for our troops deep in afganistan(resupply,isolated,get overrun) i only hope india feels threatened by events in pakistan and puts them down quickly so that no terrorist gets hands on pakistans nuclear package. the world is going nuts when a bigger preemptive war likily is the best solution
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- All the US has to do is sit back and let all these countries kill each other off--we don''''t need to but in at all!!
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Posted by liberalme at 11:22 AM : Aug 21, 2008
Typical selfish lack of compassion for human life liberal attitude.
Spoiled rotten selfish egotistical arrogant little brat. - Reply to this comment
- "Bloodshed, Political Fight Plague Pakistan
As Suicide Attacks Kill Dozens, One Of Government Coalition Members Threatens Pullout"
----huh??? bloodshed, plagues, suicide attacks??? In a Muslim country??
It can''t be!! - Reply to this comment
- To quote the immortal Gomer, SURPRISE, SURPRISE, SURPRISE! Wait till bum ladens minions get hold of those so called "safe" nuclear warheads.
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- Posted by terrorislamz at 02:25 PM : Aug 21, 2008
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If someone like you is against Obama, then he must be the leader we''ve been looking for. - Reply to this comment
- For this report all that was required to be written that the status quo prevails in Pakistan.
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- What else have the Western advocates of democracy in Pakistan expect?Milk and honey would flow in the streets of Pakistan after the departure of Musharraf?They should be prepared for far worse in the days ahead.American pursuit of democracy in Pakistan will produce the same chaos that hit Iraq when America indulged in similar illusions there.
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- The taliban are just chopping off the hand that protects arms and feeds them.
A man saved a frozen rattle snake, took it in and fed it. Later it bit him a killed him, before he died he asked the snake," I saved you and protected you why did you bite me?: The snakes reply was "You knew what I was when you picked me up" - Reply to this comment
- These fights are paricularly vicious because it''s all about money!
They didn''t call Benazir''s husband Mr. Ten Percent for nothing!
The situation reminds me of politics closer to home.
The reason the neocons are so vicious in their political attacks is because there''s so much money involved for them.
Think Swiftboats and No-bid contracts and you get the idea! - Reply to this comment
- Since Pakistan is now ''politically unstable'', do they have to give up their nukes?
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- All the US has to do is sit back and let all these countries kill each other off--we don''t need to but in at all!!
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- Fighting for the scraps of power left by Mushareff''s departure.
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- Pakistan and India cant blow themselfs up. Where would we outsource all our jobs to then?
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- How did they ever get the Bomb ? The Taliban working there hate and killings.The Pakistan Government needs too get it together, or they shall hang alone.
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- I see American special interest already has things pumped up. They probably already have their popcorn and a front row seat. Next stop India?
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- My point exactly Gangesdak, Pakistan is incapable of managing itself because there are so many people who run the show in the form of a coalition which is more often than not disfuntional, if you are still doubtful ask Italians or Israelis.
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- Nothing wrong with parliamentary type governments, even with coalition with multiple parties. Point is, Pakistan is incapable of managing itself.
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- This is an example of what is wrong with coalition and by extension parliamentary type of governments. Coming up in the very near future! General elections, believe me.
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