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Deadly blast hits Pakistan market after Taliban attack targeting soldiers

Bomb kills 10 civilians Monday after Taliban claim separate blast killing 20 soldiers Sunday; Sharif cancels Davos trip

Pakistani policemen stand guard at a check post near the site of bomb attack on Sunday
Karim Ullah/AFP/Getty

A suicide bomber killed 13 people in a crowded market near Pakistan's army headquarters on Monday, a day after a bomb planted by Taliban insurgents ripped through a vehicle carrying Pakistani troops, killing 20 soldiers and prompting Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to cancel his trip to the World Economic Forum in the Swiss resort of Davos this week.

The blast Monday occurred in Rawalpindi, in one of the most secure areas of the city, said Police Chief Akhtar Hayat Lalika. The explosion also wounded 15 people, according to police official Omar Sohail. Another police official, Sardar Zulfiqar, said that the Monday attack was a suicide bombing and that some security personnel were believed to be among the dead. 

There was no claim of responsibility for the blast in Rawalpindi, but considering that it happened in the middle of an area home to many military installations and buildings it could be seen as an assault against the country's armed forces.

In the attack Sunday, at least 30 other people were wounded as a convoy prepared to leave the volatile northwestern town of Bannu for nearby North Waziristan, a lawless, tribal region on the Afghan border where many Al-Qaeda-linked armed groups are holed up.

The bold, daylight attack — the biggest on Pakistani security forces in months — dealt a major blow to the army at a time when Pakistan is already under strong U.S. pressure to do more to contain the insurgency on its western frontier.

The army said the bomb had been planted in a civilian vehicle rented locally in order to transport troops to North Waziristan. The device exploded as soldiers got inside the car and prepared to leave.

"With the help of God we claim responsibility for this," Pakistani Taliban spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said in a telephone call from an undisclosed location.

"The army is our enemy. We will carry out many more attacks like this."

The blast, which was heard all around Bannu, came despite recent hints by the Taliban that they might be theoretically open to the idea of peace talks with the government.

And yet attacks continue unabated, a concern to regional powers already anxious about security as most foreign troops prepare to leave neighboring Afghanistan this year.

The group had earlier vowed to step up attacks on security and government forces after electing a new hard-line leader, Mullah Fazlullah, at the end of last year.

Davos trip cancelled

Sharif condemned the attack and canceled his trip to the Davos gathering, which runs from Jan. 22 to 25 and draws thousands of the world's most influential people.

"Our nation is united against extremism and terrorism and the sacrifices rendered by our citizens and personnel of law enforcing agencies will not go in vain," he said in a news release.

Sharif came to power last year promising to step up efforts to engage the Taliban in peace talks and find a negotiated solution to years of fighting.

Even though both sides have made tentative overtures toward negotiations, no meaningful discussions have taken place for years. The Pakistani Taliban, who are loosely aligned with their Afghan namesakes, are also deeply fractured, making policy coordination all the more difficult within the group.

"The fact is that we have neither refused dignified, serious and meaningful talks in the past, nor will we deny the importance of negotiations in the future," Azam Tariq, a Pakistani Taliban spokesman, told Reuters Television on Friday.

"However, let me say that the government has never made any serious effort to hold talks."

Shadid, the other spokesman, denied the movement had decided to ditch talks altogether after the death of its previous leader, Hakimullah Mehsud, in a November drone strike which enraged the Taliban and hardened its stance against the government.

"There is a war going on between us and them, and in a war people get killed. They kill us, we kill them," he said. "But, even now, if the government can prove its sincerity and its authority, we are ready for talks."

Reuters and the Associated Press

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