Bomb blast kills nine people in Pakistan, near Afghan border
MIRANSHAH: A bomb rigged to a motorcycle exploded in northwest Pakistan near the Afghan border, killing nine people, officials said on Wednesday, the latest violence in a recent rise in attacks in the country.
The bomb was detonated by remote control late on Tuesday when an army vehicle passed in Mir Ali town in the North Waziristan region, said three Pakistani officials who declined to be identified as they are not authorized to speak to the media.
A spokesman for the Pakistani army, which is responsible for security in the volatile, ethnic Pashtun region, did not respond to calls seeking comment.
“Waziristan is bleeding once again,†said police official Tahir Khan in Peshawar, the main city in the northwest, who said he had heard about the blast but had no details.
No militant group claimed responsibility.
North Waziristan was long home to Taliban and al Qaeda until the Pakistani army launched a major push against them in mid-2014.
The military offensive cleared the militants from their bases and largely broke up their networks, forcing them to flee either over the porous border into Afghanistan or to other parts of Pakistan.
But the militants have struck back, sometimes with major attacks.
Last Friday, three Pakistani Taliban suicide bombers stormed a college in Peshawar, killing eight students and a guard.
A week earlier, a senior police commander was killed in a suicide bomb attack in Peshawar.
On Tuesday, the Pakistani Taliban killed a member of an anti-Taliban faction in another part of the northwest, while a bomb aimed at members of another pro-government faction killed five people a week earlier. —Reuters
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