ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Aug. 28, 2008

Bomb Attack Kills 9 On Pakistan Bus

Police, Prisoners In Transport Latest Targets As Militants Wage Bloody War Near Afghan Border

    • Pakistani paramilitary troops stand guard on a street to ensure security in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 27, 2008. Photo

      Pakistani paramilitary troops stand guard on a street to ensure security in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 27, 2008.  (AP Photo/Shakil Adil)

    • A Pakistani walks on the rubble of a girls' school destroyed by militants with explosives the day before in Badabair, near Peshawar, Pakistan, Aug. 25, 2008. Photo

      A Pakistani walks on the rubble of a girls' school destroyed by militants with explosives the day before in Badabair, near Peshawar, Pakistan, Aug. 25, 2008.  (AP Photo/Muhammad Sajjad)

    • Pakistan's paramilitary soldiers stand beside a burnt armored vehicle in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 25, 2008. Photo

      Pakistan's paramilitary soldiers stand beside a burnt armored vehicle in Karachi, Pakistan, Aug. 25, 2008.  (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)

    • Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif Photo

      Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif  (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

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(AP)  Suspected militants bombed a bus carrying prisoners in northwest Pakistan on Thursday, killing at least nine people as fighting between security forces and extremists flared across the country's tribal belt.

The powerful blast left a massive crater in the middle of a bridge in Bannu and left the burnt-out vehicle completely mangled.

The fresh violence came just over a week after longtime U.S. ally Pervez Musharraf resigned as president, triggering a scramble for power that collapsed Pakistan's governing coalition.

The party long led by slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto is now in a position to dominate the government and it is toughening its stance against Islamist extremists.

The Pakistani Taliban, meanwhile, are becoming increasingly bold, claiming responsibility for a wave of suicide bombings and gun attacks.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack Thursday, though police said militants were the likely culprit. It happened as a bus carrying prisoners crossed a bridge in Bannu, a town in the North West Frontier Province, said Waqas Ahmad, an area police chief.

The dead included police officers and prisoners, said Jalil Khan, another police official. But he could not provide an exact breakdown.

Hours earlier, security forces drove off a Taliban attack on a fort and pounded another band of militants holed up in a health center, officials said Wednesday as fighting spread to new areas in the tribal belt along the Afghan border.

As many as 49 insurgents were reported killed in separate attacks.

Pakistan's 5-month-old government initially sought to calm militant violence by holding peace talks.

But the initiatives have borne little fruit, and U.S. officials have been pressing for tougher action against insurgent groups blamed for rising violence across the border in Afghanistan and in cities further inland.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Add a Comment
by questionnews August 28, 2008 11:56 AM PDT
Never take the bus in a Muslim Country!!
Walk, crawl, rickshaw anything but a bus!
Reply to this comment
by bin_biden August 28, 2008 12:57 PM PDT
The real enemy is Osama. His clique Al Qada plans more rambling fields of poppies to create potent tar heroin. Why fight a war against the common people of Waziristan? Al Qada''s isomizers work night and day producing the illicit narcotic. Addicts all over the world make demands for the exotic substance. Al Qada Members must be caught and imprisoned.
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