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Pakistan militants attack Rawalpindi mosque
By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad

Published: December 4 2009 11:22 | Last updated: December 4 2009 17:45

Suspected pro-Taliban militants launched an armed attack and a suicide bombing 
on a mosque in Rawalpindi on Friday, killing at least 39 people and wounding 
more than 80 others.

The attack began just after Friday prayers, targeting a mosque frequented by 
military officials in the Qasim market district. 

Rawalpindi is Pakistan's main garrison town and the mosque is located about 10 
minutes' drive from the Pakistan army's general headquarters.
Officials said a lone suicide bomber had detonated a blast in the mosque and 
minutes later as many as five militants, who were apparently present in the 
compound of the mosque, began firing indiscriminately.

The attack has revived concerns over the safety of army personnel who are 
waging a campaign against Taliban militants in the south Waziristan region near 
the Afghan border. Officials said at least one army major general and a 
brigadier were among those killed. A former vice chief of the army, Mohammad 
Yusuf, was among those injured.

"This is a security lapse and it shows that there was a gap somewhere which 
allowed these people to go through" said Mehmood Shah, a former army commander, 
in comments on a Pakistani TV channel. 

In October, pro-Taliban militants launched a daring attack on the army's GHQ 
and took as many as 42 military personnel hostage. That episode ended after two 
days when army commandos stormed the building where the hostages were being 
held. At least 23 people were killed in that attack, including 14 military 
personnel and nine pro-Taliban militants. 

Intelligence officials said the latest attack once again underlined the 
difficulty of securing congested urban areas in a country where the militants 
are largely from the local population.

"You can put together as many layers of security as you want. But you will 
always face the difficult choice of creating a fool-proof cordon, especially in 
exceptionally busy urban areas" said an intelligence source. "Do we delay or 
stop people from going for their Friday prayers?". 

In recent months, senior intelligence officials have claimed that for each 
successful attack, there have been at least nine others that have failed 
because of timely intelligence warnings. 

"The problem is that such attacks will keep on coming for some time to come. 
What is important is that they must be stopped or else the militants will just 
feel they are winning," said one western defence official. 


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