Reuters  video  click  link:
http://uk.reuters.com/video/2013/05/18/two-bombings-at-mosques-in-northwestern?videoId=242875145&videoChannel=117759&refresh=true


http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/05/17/bombs-at-2-mosques-in-northwest-pakistan-kill-10-people-wound-more-than-30/

Bombs at 2 mosques in northwest Pakistan kill 15, wound at least 70
Published May 17, 2013

Associated Press

  a.. 
  May 17, 2013 - A Pakistani man injured in a bomb blast in a mosque in the 
Malakand district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, is brought to a hospital in 
Peshawar, Pakistan. (AP) 

PESHAWAR, Pakistan –  Bombs that exploded outside two mosques in a village in 
northwestern Pakistan killed at least 15 people Friday, underlining the 
challenge of militant violence facing a new government set to take power under 
the leadership of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

The blasts at the two Sunni Muslim mosques also wounded 70 people, said tribal 
police officer Mohammad Jamil Khan. Both of the mosques were badly damaged, and 
the roof of one of them collapsed. The mosques were located in Baz Darrah 
village in the Malakand district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said another 
tribal police officer, Badshah Rehman.

Shahid Ali, who was in the first mosque that was attacked, said the explosion 
came just as worshippers were starting Friday prayers.

"I rushed out with others and saw several people bleeding and crying," Ali told 
The Associated Press by telephone. "There was dust and smoke around."

Ali rushed to the second mosque after it was attacked and saw that its roof had 
caved in and it was on fire.

"Many people are buried under the rubble," he said.

Rescue workers were trying to retrieve the dead and wounded from the debris, 
Rehman said.

Ameer Wahab, an injured college student at a hospital, said he was among more 
than 100 people inside the main hall of the mosque where the Imam (prayer 
leader) had just finished the Friday sermon when a deafening bang was heard 
from the veranda of the mosque.

"I don't know how I managed to get out of that hell. There was fire and debris, 
my feet, my face was burning and something hit me at arm," Wahab told The 
Associated Press.

Dr. Zardost Khan at Dargai Hospital, where Wahab was admitted, said 35 injured 
and one dead were brought to his hospital while many more injured and dead were 
taken to other hospitals in surrounding areas.

No one has claimed responsibility for the blasts, but suspicion will likely 
fall on the Pakistani Taliban.

The Sunni militant group has been waging a bloody insurgency against the 
government for years that has killed thousands of civilians and security 
personnel. The militants have attacked Sunni mosques in the past, perhaps 
because the worshippers did not follow their extremist brand of Islam.

The Pakistani army has mounted multiple operations against the militants in the 
northwest, but they have proven resilient and continue to carry out near-daily 
attacks.

The Taliban recently launched a series of attacks in the run-up to national 
elections on May 11 in an attempt to derail the vote. Pakistanis defied the 
militant group by coming out in large numbers to cast their ballots.

Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N Party was the big winner in the election and 
appears set to form the next government. The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Party, 
led by former cricket star Imran Khan, is expected to form the provincial 
government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Both politicians have called for negotiations with the Taliban, and Khan has 
even said that Pakistani troops should stop battling the militants and pull out 
of areas of the northwest. Now he faces the task of applying his election 
platform to the challenges of governing one of Pakistan's most violent areas.

Sharif's government will also seek to turn around Pakistan's economy, which is 
hampered by power outages that last up to 18 hours a day in some parts of the 
country.

Pakistan has turned to neighboring Iran to help deal with the crisis. On 
Friday, a spokesman for Pakistan's Ministry of Commerce said that Iran is 
providing electricity to several towns and villages in southwest Baluchistan 
province at cost of around $3 million a month.

Paying for the electricity is complicated by U.S. sanctions preventing 
financial transactions with many Iranian banks because of the country's suspect 
nuclear program, said Mohammad Ashraf. Therefore, Pakistan plans to pay for the 
electricity by exporting wheat to Iran.

"This food supply doesn't come under international sanctions Iran is facing," 
Ashraf said.

Iran sent Pakistan a bill for $53 million for electricity supplied up to 
mid-February, said Ashraf. Pakistan plans to pay by sending Iran 1 million tons 
of wheat. The Pakistani government on Thursday approved sending 100,000 tons of 
wheat as the first installment. The first ship carrying about 30,000 tons is 
expected to sail to Iran sometime next week, Ashraf said.

Pakistan also has plans to build a pipeline to import natural gas from Iran, 
despite the threat of U.S. sanctions.


Read more: 
http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/05/17/bombs-at-2-mosques-in-northwest-pakistan-kill-10-people-wound-more-than-30/#ixzz2TcZRwR9z


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