NeWs: Recent Attacks In or Linked to Pakistan

A look at some new chief attacks in Pakistan or blamed on Pakistan-based militants:– May 27, 2009: A suicide auto bomber targets buildings quarters control and aptitude offices in the eastern capital city of Lahore, manslaughter at least 30 and injuring more than 200. — March 30, 2009: Gunmen armed with rifles and supervision grenades descend upon a control academy on the outskirts of Lahore, manslaughter at least 12 people and wounding dozens. — March 27, 2009: A suicide bomber demolishes a jammed mosque tight-fisted the northwestern city of Jamrud, manslaughter hardly 50 people and injuring scores more.

– March 3, 2009: Gunmen descend upon the Sri Lankan chauvinistic cricket yoke in Lahore, wounding diverse players and manslaughter six policemen and a driver. 26-28, 2008: Ten attackers, allegedly from Pakistan, despatch 164 people in a three-day battering on payment hotels, a Jewish center and other sites in Mumbai, India. — Nov. — Sept. 20, 2008: A suicide business TNT kills at least 54 and wounds more than 250 and devastates the Marriott bed in Islamabad.– Sept. — Aug. 6, 2008: A suicide auto bombing kills at least 35 people and wounds 80 at a control checkpoint in Peshawar.

21, 2008: Suicide bombers bump themselves up at two gates of a weapons place in the city of Wah, manslaughter at least 67 people and wounding at least 100. — March 11, 2008: Suicide bombs split owing to seven-story control headquarters and a descendants in Lahore, manslaughter at least 24 people and wounding more than 200.– Feb. — Jan. 29, 2008: Suicide bomber strikes burial of slain control administrator in the Swat Valley, manslaughter more than 40 people and wounding at least 60. 10, 2008: Suicide bomber blows himself up summarize complete control guarding the High Court in Lahore, manslaughter 24 people and wounding scores more.

– Dec. 27, 2007: Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and 20 other people are killed in a suicide bombing and shooting descend upon in Rawalpindi, right-minded south of the first-class.

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