Islamabad - At least 13 people, mostly security personnel,
were killed and around two dozen injured on Tuesday when a bomb
targeted a Pakistan Air Force bus in the country's
north-western city of Peshawar, officials said.
The bomb exploded when the vehicle was passing over a bridge on
the outskirts of the city.
'It was a remote-controlled explosive device which was planted
under the bridge,' said Inspector General of Police Malik Naveed.
TV footage showed pools of blood on the scene, with rescue
service personnel trying to put out the fire that gutted several
vehicles.
Khizar Hayat, a medical officer at the Lady Reading Hospital, said
11 bodies were brought to the hospital while two of the victims
succumbed to their injuries there.
Another 11 injured were being treated at the hospital, four of
whom were said to be in critical condition.
Most of the dead were security personnel from the Pakistan Air
Force (PAF), said another medical officer Ghareeb Ullah.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack but the
authorities believe it could be carried out by the militants in
Pakistan's tribal region bordering Afghanistan.
'Apparently, it seems linked with the situation in tribal areas,'
said Naveed.
Fighter jets from PAF and gunship helicopters pounded several
militants' positions in Bajaur tribal district on Monday, killing at
least 50 rebels and taking the death toll in five days of fighting to
more than 160.
Taliban rebels had vowed to take revenge for the military action
in the district, where clashes erupted last week when hundreds of
militants surrounded a paramilitary base in Loi Sam area.
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