This Article is From Nov 12, 2010

Karachi blast: At least 18 killed, over 100 injured

Karachi blast: At least 18 killed, over 100 injured
Karachi, Pakistan: A group of heavily armed Pakistani Taliban militants today detonated an explosives- laden truck at the office of the CID spearheading the drive against terrorists in the southern port city of Karachi, killing at least 18 people and injuring 115 others.
    
The attackers initially exchanged fire with guards outside the office of the Crime Investigation Department, located in a high security zone at a short distance from the Chief Minister's official residence and several five-star hotels and consulates.
    
After getting past a barricade and disrupting power in the area, the attackers detonated the explosives-laden truck at 8:17 pm (local time).
    
The powerful blast destroyed the facade of the CID office and reduced the nearby Civil Lines police station to rubble.
    
It also uprooted trees, blew out windows of nearby structures and shook buildings located several kilometers away.
    
Officials told the media that at least 18 people were killed and 115 others injured.

The dead included several policemen and security personnel.
    
The relatives of policemen, including women and children, living in nearby residential quarters were among the injured.
    
Sindh Home Minister Zulfiqar Mirza compared the attack to the suicide car bombing of the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad that killed nearly 60 people in September 2008.
    
Guards who tried to stop the attackers were among those killed, Mirza said.
    
The banned Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan claimed responsibility for the blast and warned it would carry out more attacks if its demands were not met, Geo News channel reported.
    
It could not immediately be ascertained whether the attackers were killed in the blast. There were conflicting reports on the number of militants involved in the attack, with figures ranging from two to four.
    
Witnesses said some of the attackers were riding motorcycles. The blast created a crater 15 to 20 feet wide and equally deep.
    
It damaged about 50 cars, a mosque and several government buildings and private residences.
    
Witnesses said the explosion blew out the windows of the Chief Minister's residence and hotels.
    
Rescue operations were hampered by lack of electricity and people dug through rubble with their hands to pull out the dead and injured.
    
The area around the CID office was cordoned off and an emergency was declared in Karachi's hospitals.
    
On Wednesday, the CID had arrested several militants, including six members of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), as part of an ongoing crackdown on terrorism.
    
Home Minister Mirza said the LeJ operatives were not in the CID office at the time of the attack. 

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