PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Sept. 18, 2009

25 Killed in Pakistan Suicide Attack

Bomber Rammed Vehicle Loaded with Explosives into Hotel in Northwest Pakistan

  •  (CBS/AP)

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(CBS/ AP)  A suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into a hotel in a northwest Pakistan market on Friday, killing 25 people in a possible sectarian attack, police and a government official said.

The attack in Usterzai village on the outskirts of Kohat town was the second in two days in the area, which is not far from the Afghan border and has witnessed past incidents of violence between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. A bomb Thursday in Kohat wounded six people.

The small Hikmat Ali Hotel, which was among several buildings badly damaged in Friday's blast, is located in a roadside market. It is owned by a Shiite, police official Asmat Ullah said.

The violence underscores the relentless insecurity in a region home to the Taliban and al Qaeda, whose Sunni extremism has only fueled sectarian attacks that have long plagued Pakistan.

A senior security official in Peshawar told CBS News, "This attack is being treated as a targeted strike at 'Shia' Muslims. We are convinced the Taliban are behind this attack. I fear, this attack may be the revival of a suicide bombing campaign." he said.

Militants continue to mount attacks despite military offensives aimed at Taliban fighters over the past year. The U.S. is particularly anxious for Pakistan to clamp down on militants it says are behind attacks on American and NATO troops across the border in Afghanistan.

Police official Ali Hassan Khan said Friday's bomber was in a vehicle.

The blast destroyed several cars, and several shops at the Kacha Paka market caved in.

Area mayor Syed Mehtabul Hassan told The Associated Press that 25 bodies were pulled out of the rubble of the hotel and nearby shops and that several other people were wounded.

Footage from a hospital aired by Pakistan's Express news channel showed some of the wounded in beds and on stretchers. The men were bloodied, bandaged and seemingly in shock.

Kohat is a garrison town around 40 miles south of Peshawar, Pakistan's main northwest city. On Thursday, six people were wounded when a bomb planted outside a shop in Kohat exploded.

Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned Friday's attack in a short press statement.

Last month, Baitullah Mehsud, leader of the main Taliban militant umbrella known as the "tehreek-e-taliban," or TTP, was killed in a missile attack believed to have been carried out by a CIA unmanned drone. Mehsud was widely known among Pakistani security and intelligence officials for overseeing the training of hundreds of volunteers in the use of explosives as well as carrying out suicide attacks, CBS reporter Farhan Bokhari reports.

His killing prompted a feud within the militants' camp to find a successor. Mehsud's killing also fuelled speculation that the Taliban will be weakened after his death. On Friday however, a senior Western defense official speaking to CBS News on condition of anonymity in Islamabad warned that the militant movement may still be capable of carrying out large scale attacks. "If its eventually proven, the Taliban were behind the attack in Kohat, that would be very serious. The attack would then suggest these people are still very, very lethal," the Western defense official said.

Pakistan's military, however, has made gains in the region over the past year.

A four-month-old army offensive against Taliban militants in the Swat Valley has - according to the military - killed more than 1,800 alleged militants, while at least three top leaders of the Swat Taliban have been arrested.

Government officials say the army is also closing in on Swat Taliban chief Maulana Fazlullah, whose radio broadcasts long spread fear among residents of the valley.

Search and clearance operations over the previous 24 hours in Swat led to the arrests of seven militants and surrenders of another 13, the Pakistani military said in a Friday statement.

© MMIX, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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by steve54z September 18, 2009 9:46 PM EDT
Islamabad should ask the Obama Administration for police technology to capture these criminals. The Rebels plot murders of innocent Children. They are only sated by LSD, PCP, methamphetamine, and hashish while forcing small children into craven sexuality.
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by underdogus09 September 18, 2009 1:43 PM EDT
Show me where it says that all of those Italian troops are from Rome!

Why waste Italian lives on a country thaty is worth less than a port-o-john?by armyoftwelve....... ITALIANS are descendants of the Roman empire!
(google it dummy) sheesssh
Reply to this comment
by underdogus09 September 18, 2009 10:06 AM EDT
Obama:"You don't make determinations about resources certainly you don't make determinations about sending your men and women into battle - without having absolute clarity about what the strategy is going to be."
There you have it folks after 8 years and thousands of deaths and BILLIONS of dollars they still don't have a "clue" on the other hand the Taliban,AlQuaeda they have a "Crystal clear STRATEGY THATS DEATH TO THE INVADER"
Reply to this comment
by underdogus09 September 18, 2009 9:29 AM EDT
NEW:(CNN) "Italian Defense Minister says 500 Italian troops will be home by Christmas".....The REAL headline "The Romans are going home with their tails between their legs"...again
Reply to this comment
by armyoftwelve September 18, 2009 12:54 PM EDT
Show me where it says that all of those Italian troops are from Rome!

Why waste Italian lives on a country thaty is worth less than a port-o-john?
by kevjustice September 18, 2009 9:05 AM EDT
In some places in Pakistan they have to turn away volunteers to be suicide bombers because they do not have enough explosives for all the volunteers.
Reply to this comment
by armyoftwelve September 18, 2009 12:53 PM EDT
Yeah, they barely have enough food, clean water and no one can read, I guess delusions of paradise aren't such a bad thing to drug the masses with, are they?
by underdogus09 September 18, 2009 8:38 AM EDT
Obama asked the Joint Chiefs, What is the end game? in Afghanistan, and was told, Frankly, we don't have one, according to a Feb. 4 report by NBC News Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski....
Reply to this comment
by bubbadubba September 18, 2009 7:22 AM EDT
By logical definition a "Pakistan suicide attack" would be an attack on Pakistan suicide.
I wonder how you do that? Maybe they held a group intervention?
America is king at stupid labels and headlines.
Reply to this comment
by armyoftwelve September 18, 2009 12:52 PM EDT
That's better than being a suicide bomber. Pakistan needs to change it's name to BOOMistan.
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