Pakistani authorities said six men suspected pf planning to
carry out suicide bomb attacks have been arrested in Rawalpindi, Reuters reports. The arrests
follow al-Qaeda’s suicide car bomb attack on the Danish embassy that killed six
people.
“We have arrested suspected suicide bombers,” said Rao Iqbal
police chief of Rawalpindi,
according to the same source. “We have recovered
three vehicles with a large quantity of explosives from the Dhok Kala Khan
area,” he added.
It appears that the
security forces found several explosives, which amounted to nearly 500
kilograms.
“It was a major terrorist plot aimed at causing death and destruction
in the twin cities,” a senior security official told AFP on condition of
anonymity.
Al-Qaeda claimed in an Internet statement Wednesday to have
carried out the attack on the Danish mission as a revenge for the publication
in Danish newspapers of the controversial cartoons insulting Islam’s Prophet
Mohammed.
Security in the capital was tightest along Constitution
Avenue the broad duel carriageway leading to the presidency building, National
Assembly, Supreme Court, various ministries and the diplomatic enclave where
many embassies are located.
The city of Rawalpindi lies 12km (seven
miles) south of the capital of Islamabad and is
the headquarters of Pakistan’s
military. It also houses the residence of President Pervez Musharraf.
Authorities say such installations may have been the target of the planned
sucide bomb attacks.
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