Bajaur Blast: Why Are Suicide Attacks Rising in Pakistan?

Pakistan has experienced multiple suicide attacks since the mid-1990s. These are now getting increasingly common, with the latest blast in Bajaur killing scores, including many children, at an election rally.

Karachi: With the death toll for the most recent suicide bombing climbing past 50 in Pakistan, the head of Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI-F) party, whose supporters were targeted in the blast, decried the country’s security forces over the apparent “intelligence failure”.

“Where are they? When will they listen to us? When will they heal our wounds? When will they establish a system that safeguards our future generations?” JUI-F leader Fazl-ur-Rehman asked on Twitter.

The conservative preacher is not the only one in Pakistan raising his voice against the rise of terrorist attacks, including suicide bombings.

The Sunday blast in Bajaur was claimed by a local affiliate of the “Islamic State” militia. The “Islamic State Khorasan” (ISIS-K) accuses JUI-F of hypocrisy for being an Islamic political group that has supported secular governments and the military.

But other extremist groups are also using suicide to target their political enemies in Pakistan.

The nation experienced more than a dozen suicide attacks in the first half of 2023, according to a report by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies, an Islamabad-based security think-tank.

This also includes a bombing in a Peshawar mosque that killed over 100 people. A commander of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, initially claimed responsibility, but this was later denied by a TTP spokesman.

And the Sunday blast at the JUI-F rally was only the latest in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which borders Afghanistan.

On July 18, eight people were injured in an apparent suicide bombing in Peshawar. On July 20, two suicide bombers attacked the official compound in Bara, Khyber district, with at least four police officers losing their lives. Another police officer was killed five days later while attempting to arrest a suicide bomber in a mosque.

Competing factions behind deadly terror strikes

Abdul Basit, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies and an expert on jihadi networks, told DW that the TTP terror group has been associated with suicide terrorism in Pakistan since it was established in December 2007.

“Apart from TTP, other major groups involved in suicide attacks include ISIS-K, North Waziristan-based commander Hafiz Gul Bahadur’s faction in North Waziristan, and the recently formed Tehreek-e-Jihad Pakistan,” Basit told DW.

“Additionally, among the various secular ethnic-separatist groups, the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) stands out as one of the major actors who took inspiration from the Islamist militants, and adopted suicide bombing as a warfare tactic,” he said.

In June, the BLA claimed responsibility for a suicide attack involving a woman bomber targeting a law enforcement convoy in the Pakistani section of Balochistan.

Long history of suicide bombings

Pakistan has experienced multiple suicide attacks since the mid-1990s, but most bombings of that era were organised by international militant organisations and sectarian outfits.

In November 1995, terrorists targeted the Egyptian embassy in Islamabad, killing 17 people. The bombings were linked to Ayman al-Zawahiri and his then-Egyptian Islamic Jihad militant outfit.

In May 2002, a suicide bombing on a bus in Karachi resulted in the deaths of 14 people, including 11 French engineers. The US consulate in Karachi was also attacked by suicide bombers in June 2002 and March 2006, leading to the death of a US diplomat and many others.

Even Pakistan’s top officials faced the threat of suicide blasts, including ex-President General Pervez Musharraf, and ex-Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, in 2003 and 2004 respectively. Both were unharmed in the attacks.

In 2005, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Pakistani sectarian terror outfit, carried out suicide attacks at the shrines of Pir Rakheel Shah in the Jhal Magsi district of the Balochistan province, and of Bari Imam in Islamabad.

TTP rises after Red Mosque clampdown

Organised suicide terrorism in Pakistan took root after a military operation against militants sheltered in Islamabad’s radical Red Mosque in June 2007.

The Red Mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital city. Photo: KhhHan432/Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 4.0.

The siege culminated in a deadly battle, with more than 100 militants and at least 11 law enforcement members losing their lives. Several months later, the TTP appeared on the scene as a formidable militant outfit.

“This marked a significant turning point in Pakistan’s history, as the TTP began a series of suicide attacks that terrorised the nation for years,” said Fakhar Kakakhel, a Peshawar-based journalist who covered Islamist militancy extensively. “The suicide bombings targeted military, government installations, public places and civilian gatherings, instilling fear and chaos in society.”

Attacks quickly grew more frequent, with former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto dying in a suicide attack on December 2007. The background of her assassination was never fully made clear.

In 2008, Pakistani officials noted 59 suicide attacks in the country, with more total casualties from such attacks than Afghanistan and Iraq had that same year. The numbers remained high for several years after that.

Years of decline

In 2014, the military launched a major military operation known as “Zarb-e-Azb,” aimed to eradicate the TTP and other al-Qaida-linked militant groups. In the years that followed, Pakistan has experienced fewer suicide attacks, with the numbers dropping into single digits around the turn of the decade.

Namely, officials noted four, three and five suicide attacks occurring in 2019, 2020 and 2021, respectively, according to the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies.

“Until late-2020, [the] TTP had been crumbling under Pakistan’s sustained Zarb-e-Azb operation, the deaths of successive leaders by US drone strikes and an internal rift that steadily pushed factions of the terror organisation to relocate to neighbouring Afghan provinces,” journalist Kakakhel said.

Taliban takeover in Afghanistan boosts militants

With the rise of the Taliban government in Afghanistan in August 2021, however, the TTP has resurfaced as a serious threat.

“Since the reunification with several splinter groups, [the] TTP has aspired to re-establish control of territory in Pakistan after being emboldened by the Taliban takeover in Afghanistan,” according to the UN Security Report on July 25.

“The group is focused on high-value targets in border areas and soft targets in urban areas. TTP capability is assessed as not matching its ambition, given that it does not control territory and lacks popular appeal in the [country’s] tribal areas,” the report said.

Experts said that the recent suicide attack in Bajaur undoubtedly shows a substantial escalation of militant groups’ capabilities and assertive approach in Pakistan.

“As the conflict intensifies, suicide terrorism also tends to increase, while when militant groups face suppression through operations like Zarb-e-Azb, the incidents of suicide terrorism decrease,” Basit said.

This article was originally published on DW.

Sri Lankan Defence Secretary Says Govt Did Not Expect Attack of Such Magnitude

Hemasiri Fernando said it would have been “impossible” to protect a large number of churches in the country despite receiving prior intelligence about the attacks.

Colombo: The Sri Lankan government never expected the Easter Sunday bombings to be of such magnitude, defence secretary Hemasiri Fernando said on Tuesday. He added that it would have been “impossible” to protect a large number of churches in the country despite receiving prior intelligence about the attacks which killed 290 people, including eight Indians.

Seven suicide bombers, believed to be members of local Islamist extremist group National Tawheed Jamath (NTJ), carried out a series of devastating blasts that tore through churches and luxury hotels in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday, in the country’s worst terror attack.

No group has claimed responsibility for Sunday’s attacks, but police have arrested 24 people – mostly members of the Islamist extremist group – in connection with the blasts that also killed 31 foreigners.

“It was quite impossible to protect a large number of churches last Sunday despite receiving prior information about these attacks,” Fernando told reporters.

He said that the government did not expect an attack of such magnitude to occur and the extensive measures to prevent the bombings would have been impossible.

“An emergency law is non-functional in this country since Sri Lanka is a democratic country. Therefore, there is very little I can do” the defence secretary was quoted as saying by the Sunday Times.

Fernando noted that the state intelligence service had already informed the government of a small but organised and powerful criminal group operating in the country.

Also Read: Sri Lanka Failed to Act on Intelligence About Attack on ‘Prominent Churches’

He said that the FBI has already commenced investigations into the incident while the Interpol is expected to arrive in the country on Tuesday.

The defence secretary also said the government will not provide protection to hotels as it is an aspect which must be looked after by their respective security officials.

Fernando said the government had not provided security to hotels even during the civil war.

Interpol secretary-general Jurgen Stock in a Twitter message offered full support to the investigation being conducted by Sri Lankan authorities.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s president Maithripala Sirisena Tuesday gave the military sweeping police powers in the wake of the Easter bombings.

The military was given a wider berth to detain and arrest suspects, powers that were used during the civil war but withdrawn when it ended.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said he feared the massacre could unleash instability and pledged to “vest all necessary powers with the defence forces” to act against those responsible.

The suicide bombings struck three churches and three luxury hotels Sunday in the island nation’s deadliest violence since a devastating civil war ended in 2009.

The blasts shattered a decade of peace in the island nation since the end of the brutal civil war with the LTTE.

The civil war ended with the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which ran a military campaign for a separate Tamil homeland in the northern and eastern provinces of the island nation for nearly 30 years.

The LTTE collapsed in 2009 after the Lankan army killed its supreme leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. The war is thought to have killed between 70,000 and 80,000 people.

Pakistan: Senior Police Official, Two Others Killed in in Balochistan Suicide Bombing

Balochistan was rocked by a series of attacks late last year that claimed over 180 lives and raised concerns about a growing militant presence.

Police officers inspect a pickup damaged by a suicide bomber which killed a senior Pakistani police official on his way to work in Quetta, Pakistan November 9, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Naseer Ahmed

Police officers inspect a pickup damaged by a suicide bomber which killed a senior Pakistani police official on his way to work in Quetta, Pakistan November 9, 2017. Credit: Reuters/Naseer Ahmed

Quetta, Pakistan: A suicide bomber killed a senior Pakistani police official on his way to work and two others on Thursday in the restive southwestern province of Balochistan, officials said.

Balochistan was rocked by a series of attacks late last year that claimed over 180 lives and raised concerns about a growing militant presence, including fighters affiliated with ISIS, which has claimed several bombings in the province.

The violence has raised concerns about security for projects in the $57 billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor, a planned transport and energy link from western China to Pakistan’s southern deep-water port of Gwadar.

“Three individuals have embraced martyrdom including (Additional Inspector General) Hamid Shakeel and his driver,” provincial government spokesman Anwar Ul Haq Kakar told Reuters.

A spokesman for the Tehreek-e-Taliban, also known as the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.

Shakil was on his way to work in the provincial capital, Quetta, when the suicide bomber intercepted his vehicle, Balochistan police Inspector General Moazzam Jah told Reuters.

One other police officer was killed and three officials were seriously wounded, he added.

Attacks on security officials in Balochistan have accelerated, with four suicide bombings and one armed attack targeting police in the past six months.

(Reuters)

Child Suicide Bombings Increase in Boko Haram Conflict: UNICEF

Children who escape Boko Haram are often held in custody by authorities or ostracised by their communities and families.

A UNICEF logo is pictured outside their offices in Geneva, Switzerland, January 30, 2017. Credit: REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

A UNICEF logo is pictured outside their offices in Geneva, Switzerland, January 30, 2017. Credit: REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

Abuja: The use of children as suicide bombers by the insurgents of Boko Haram has surged in 2017, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said on Wednesday.

In the countries fighting Boko Haram in the Lake Chad region – Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad – 27 children have been used in suicide attacks by the armed Islamist group in the first three months of the year, UNICEF said in a report and statement.

There were nine cases in the same period last year, and 30 children used for bombings in all of 2016, it said. Most were girls.

The Boko Haram insurgency is now in its eighth year with little sign of ending, having claimed over 20,000 lives. Its child kidnappings gained global notoriety after the abduction of more than 200 girls from the town of Chibok in Nigeria’s northeast in 2014, three years ago on Friday.

Boko Haram has kidnapped thousands, often raping them, forcing them to become suicide bombers, help the militants in their conflict or marry fighters, UNICEF said.

“These children are victims, not perpetrators,” said Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF‘s regional director for West and Central Africa.

“Forcing or deceiving them into committing such horrific acts is reprehensible.”

One 16-year-old girl from Chad lost her legs after being drugged and forced by Boko Haram to take part in an attempted suicide attack on a crowded market, according to UNICEF‘s report.

Though the girl survived, her family initially rejected her “out of fear of stigma”.

Children who escape Boko Haram are often held in custody by authorities or ostracised by their communities and families.

About 370 remain in custody, a UNICEF spokeswoman told Reuters, after Nigeria’s military on Monday released 593 people, including children, after clearing them of having ties with Boko Haram.

“Society’s rejection of these children, and their sense of isolation and desperation, could be making them more vulnerable to promises of martyrdom through acceptance of dangerous and deadly missions,” UNICEF said in its report.

Children make up 1.3 million of the 2.3 million people displaced by the conflict.

UNICEF said its response to the crisis “remains severely underfunded”, hitting efforts to provide mental health and social support, reunite families and offer education, safe water and medical services.

Last year, the group received only two-fifths of the $154 million it appealed for.

The UN says it needs $1.5 billion in humanitarian aid for the Lake Chad region this year, and $457 million had been pledged for 2017 by late February.

Suicide Bomber in Indonesia Wounds One in Police Station Attack

The police suspect the attacker was an ISIS supporter and fear the influence of the militant group could pitch the country back into violence.

Indonesian Navy special forces take part in an anti-terror drill in Jakarta, December 20, 2015 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. REUTERS/M Agung Rajasa/Antara Foto

Indonesian Navy special forces take part in an anti-terror drill in Jakarta, December 20, 2015 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Credit: Reuters/M Agung Rajasa

Jakarta: A suicide bomber on a motorcycle attacked a police station in the small Indonesian city of Solo on Tuesday, July 5, killing himself and wounding a police officer, a police spokesman said.

Shortly after the attack, President Joko Widodo, who is from Solo and a former mayor of the town, ordered police to arrest others that may have been connected to the suicide bomber.

“I have asked the police chief to chase down the network and uncover who is the suicide bomber,” the president told reporters. “We hope for the people to remain calm in this last fasting day. No need to be scared.”

Police said the attacker detonated the bomb he was wearing shortly after driving into the grounds of the police station in Solo, known as a hotbed for religious fundamentalism. A police officer who tried to stop him from entering sustained minor injuries.

The identity of the bomber was not immediately clear, but intelligence chief Sutiyoso told Metro TV he suspected the attacker was a supporter of ISIS.

Indonesian authorities have been on heightened alert since the ISIS militant group claimed an attack in the capital, Jakarta, in January that killed four people. The four attackers also died.

Southeast Asia’s largest economy is home to the world’s largest Muslim population, the vast majority of whom practise a moderate form of Islam.

Indonesia saw a spate of attacks in the 2000s, the deadliest of which was a nightclub bombing on the holiday island of Bali that killed 202 people, most of them tourists.

Police have been largely successful in destroying domestic militant cells since then, but they now worry that the influence of ISIS could pitch the country back into violence.

Southeast Asian militants who claim to be fighting for ISIS in the Middle East have said they have chosen one of the most wanted men in the Philippines to head a regional faction of the ultra-radical group that includes Indonesians and Malaysians, security officials said last month.

(Reuters)

 

Thirteen Remanded to Jail For Istanbul Airport Suicide Bombing

A total of 49 people are still being treated in hospitals from the attack and 17 remain in intensive care.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan prays for the airport employees who were killed in Tuesday's attack on the airport, during his visit to Ataturk airport in Istanbul, Turkey, July 2. Credit: Reuters Murat Cetinmuhurdar/P

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan prays for the airport employees who were killed in June 28 attack on the airport, during his visit to Ataturk airport in Istanbul, Turkey, July 2. Credit: Reuters/Murat Cetinmuhurdar

Ankara: A Turkish court on July 3 remanded 13 alleged Islamic State (ISIS) militants to custody pending trial in connection with suicide bombings at Istanbul’s main airport on June 28 that claimed 45 lives.

The 13 included three foreigners, Dogan, a private news agency said.

Three militants opened fire outside Ataturk airport’s international arrivals terminal on June 28 night before two of them entered the building and blew themselves up. A third militant detonated his explosives at the entrance.

“The terrorist organisation called Daesh, which burnt our hearts in this holy month, is the biggest form of evil that targets our religion,” President Tayyip Erdogan told a Ramadan dinner in Istanbul on July 3. “They have no links whatsoever to Islam or Muslims,” Erdogan said.

A total of 49 people are still being treated in hospitals from the attack and 17 remain in intensive care, Istanbul authorities said on July 3.

Two Russian nationals have been identified as suspected ISIS suicide bombers in the attack, Turkish media said on July 3.

After Suicide Bombings, Lebanon Fears Additional Attacks

Though the UN Refugee Agency stated that the attackers came from inside Syria, local authorities raided Syrian refugee camps and detained hundreds of people.

A damaged vehicle is seen near a blood-stained wall at the site where suicide bomb attacks took place, in the Bekaa valley, Lebanon June 28, 2016. REUTERS/Hassan Abdallah

A damaged vehicle is seen near a blood-stained wall at the site where suicide bomb attacks took place, in the Bekaa valley, Lebanon, June 28, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Hassan Abdallah

Beirut/Qaa, Lebanon: The Lebanese government warned on Tuesday, June 28, of a heightened terrorist threat after eight suicide bombers targeted a Christian village at the border with Syria, the latest spillover of that country’s conflict into Lebanon.

The village of Qaa was targeted on Monday, June 27, in two waves of suicide attacks that killed five people. The first group of bombers attacked before dawn and the second later at night, two of them blowing themselves up near a church.

Security officials believe ISIS militants were behind the attack. There has been no claim of responsibility.

In reference to the number of attackers, the Lebanese government said the attack and the “unfamiliar way” it was carried out represented a new phase of “confrontation between the Lebanese state and evil terrorism”.

Prime Minister Tammam Salam “expressed his fear that what happened in Qaa is the start of a new wave of terrorist operations in different areas of Lebanon“, information minister Ramzi Jreij said in televised comments after a cabinet meeting.

Sunni Muslim militants have repeatedly struck in Lebanon since the eruption of the war in neighbouring Syria, where the powerful Lebanese Shi’ite Muslim group Hezbollah is fighting in support of President Bashar al-Assad.

Interior minister Nohad Machnouk said the attackers had come from inside Syria, and not refugee camps hosting Syrian refugees who number more than one million in Lebanon, according to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR).

Army commander General Jean Kahwaji said militants had started a new phase “but it is not certain that they have a new plan”. Speaking in Beirut ahead of a meeting with Salam and other security chiefs, he said the bombers included a woman.

Local authorities imposed curfews on Syrian refugees in the area following the attacks. The Lebanese army said it had mounted dawn raids on Syrian refugee camps, detaining 103 people for being illegally present in Lebanon.

The majority of Syrian refugees have no legal status in Lebanon due to the complications and costs of obtaining or renewing residency rights under rules imposed by the Lebanese government, aid agencies say.

In Qaa, residents armed with assault rifles fanned out in the streets for several hours on June 28, citing the need to protect the area. They later dispersed when the army asked them to go home. The head of the Qaa local council had on Monday night urged residents to shoot anyone suspicious.

Security sources said Hezbollah deployed dozens of armed men in nearby villages to help secure the area.

“We are not leaving for sure, we are staying here… we are not afraid. We are not leaving our land,” Maher Rizk, a cafe owner, said.

The UNHCR said the northern region of Lebanon‘s Bekaa Valley hosts a significant population of vulnerable people, both Lebanese and refugees.

“Law enforcement authorities are conducting follow-up security operations in the area. At a time of heightened tensions, it is important that the communities stand together,” Matthew Saltmarsh, senior UNCHR communications officer, said.