Pakistani authorities said that a suicide bomb attack has
killed Saturday at least 18 people and wounded at least 25 people at an
election rally in northwestern Pakistan,
the Associated Press reports.
North West Frontier province, bordering Afghanistan, is
a region where Islamic extremists operate and has been the scene of other
attacks.
The blast occurred in the town of Charsadda while 200 members of a regional
political party, Awami National party, an ethnic Pashtun nationalist party, were
listening to their leaders. According to BBC, Awami National party is seen as
an anti-Islamist force; consequently al-Qaeda might be suspected for the blast.
Area police chief Mohammed Khan said 18 people died, but
party officials told local television stations that 20 were killed in the
blast.
The police officials blame this attack on the Islamic
militants, who are also held responsible for Benazir Bhutto’s death, Voice of
America reports. Her death determined the delay of the parliamentary elections
which were originally scheduled in January.
Interior Minister Hamid Nawaz said that the suicide bomber
might have detonated his explosives “very close to the stage”, where the leaders
of the party were gathered.
Nawaz added that the militants are targeting the political
parties just before the general elections scheduled on February 18, and expressed
his fears for the security of the politicians.
“We are beefing security measures because only a little more
than a week is left in the elections,” he said.
Zahid Khan, an ANP spokesman, told AFP that he believes
Pakistani government intelligence agencies are behind the suicide attack: “We blame security agencies for the attack. The agencies
want to create civil war and want to support dictatorship.”
Three days ago the ANP’s vice-president Fazalur Rehman
Atakhel was shot dead by a gunman on a motorbike, in the southern city of
Karachi.