40 Killed In Pakistan As Militants End Peace Deal
July 16, 2007
The site of the attack in the Northwest Frontier Province (AFP)
July 16, 2007 -- Pakistani security forces are on high alert today
after 40 people were killed in the country's northwest in a wave of
militant violence.
Fourteen people, 11 of them paramilitary soldiers, were killed on July 15 in a coordinated ambush that involved two suicide attackers and a roadside bomb explosion in the Northwest Frontier Province.
Hours later, a suicide bomber targeted a police recruiting center in the city of Dera Ismail Khan, in the same province, killing 26, many of them young men taking a police entrance exam.
Interior Minister Aftab Ahmed Sherpao said the two attacks could be militants' response to a military assault on a mosque in Islamabad several days earlier. Some 75 militants were killed on July 10 when commandos stormed the fortified Lal Masjid (Red Mosque).
Also on July 15, pro-Taliban militants in the North Waziristan region on the Afghan border called off a 10-month peace deal with the government. They accuse Islamabad of violating the agreement by deploying more troops in the region.
On July 14, a suicide attack on a military convoy in North Waziristan killed 24 soldiers.
(compiled from agency reports)