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Mulitple Mosque Attacks Kill Scores In Pakistan

A suicide bomber struck a mosque frequented by anti-Taliban tribal elders in northwestern Pakistan during afternoon prayers Friday, killing at least 67 people in one of the deadliest attacks this year.

Later in the day, three grenade blasts killed at least three people at another mosque in the troubled Afghan border region.

The blasts were the latest to hit religious gatherings and underscored the relentless security challenge in the U.S.-allied nation, where Islamist militants have managed to strike at the state and citizens who work against them despite pressure from army offensives.

In the first attack, the Sunni mosque's roof collapsed as hundreds of worshippers were gathered inside for the most popular prayer session of the week, and many victims were trapped in the debris.

People in private vehicles rushed the wounded to hospitals in Peshawar, the main city in the northwest, TV footage showed. A woman was beating her head, while two elderly men in blood-soaked clothes rested in a hospital corridor.

The explosion occurred in Darra Adam Khel, an area famous for its illegal weapons bazaars and located near Pakistan's tribal regions where Taliban-led militants have been active.

"The blast tossed me up, then I fell down," Mohammad Usman, 32, a schoolteacher with wounds on his head and arms said from his hospital bed in Peshawar. "Later, it was just like a graveyard."

Local government official Shahid Ullah said the mosque may have been targeted because local tribesmen running an anti-Taliban militia have often met there, though not on this particular Friday. The Pakistani government has encouraged tribal leaders to set up militias to fight the insurgents, and the Taliban have frequently targeted those opponents.

GEO News TV reported that the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack, but the group's spokesmen did not immediately respond to calls from The Associated Press seeking comment.

Ullah said that in addition to the deaths, at least 80 others were wounded. That made the attack the deadliest since September's suicide bombing on a Shiite Muslim procession in the southwestern city of Quetta, which killed 65. The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for that strike.

On Friday night, three hand grenades exploded during evening prayers at a Sunni mosque in the Badhber area on the outskirts of Peshawar. Along with three dead, the blast wounded 24 others, said police official Ejaz Khan.

Pakistani TV channels showed bloodied victims being rushed to the hospital.

Several shrines and mosques belonging to rival sects hated by the Taliban have been targeted in Pakistan this year. At least three such attacks occurred in October alone.

Provincial Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain called the militants "beasts" that are lashing out at Pakistan's crackdown against them.

The U.S. needs Pakistan's support for the war in Afghanistan in part because it uses its roads to transport supplies to troops across the border. Those supply trucks, however, have become targets of suspected militants and criminal groups.

Two blasts targeting NATO supply trucks damaged 11 of the vehicles at the Torkham border crossing in the Khyber tribal region on Friday, government official Tahir Khan said.

The explosions struck an area where the trucks were waiting for their turn to go through to Afghanistan. Authorities were still investigating the nature of the blasts, Khan said.

In Pakistan's southwest, two men on a motorcycle opened fire at a NATO supply truck in Sohrab town, killing its driver and wounding two others, police official Mohammad Younus said. The truck was on its way back to Karachi after off loading NATO supplies in Afghanistan.

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