A suicide bombing has killed 14 people in the second attempt on Pakistani President General Pervez Musharraf’s life in 11 days, raising troubling questions about Musharraf’s ability to hold on to power and keep a militant Islamic movement at bay.
The suicide attackers detonated two massive bombs on Thursday while Musharraf’s convoy passed on a congested road, killing 14 people and getting close enough to crack the windshield on his limousine.
Musharraf (60) was unhurt, in the attack, which took place just a few hundred metres from the site of the previous bombing. It came a day after Musharraf made a deal with hard-line Islamic political parties to step down as army chief by the end of next year.
In a televised interview about seven hours after the attack, the president — a close ally in the United States war on terrorism — blamed Islamic militants for both attacks and vowed to ”cleanse the country of these extremists”.
Officials said the attackers tried to ram the motorcade in two pickup trucks, each loaded with 20kg to 30kg of explosives, as it passed two gas stations on a main road at about 1.40pm in Rawalpindi, a bustling city near the capital, Islamabad. Witnesses reported seeing body parts, shattered cars and broken glass along the route.
”There was a vehicle that approached me, my car,” Musharraf said. ”A policeman stopped it, it exploded, I saw it. The only thing happened was we went faster, but in the process in front of us there was another bomb that blasted. Again nothing happened to us and we went through the debris.”
He appeared calm, wearing a navy-blue business suit.
Two policemen and at least two suicide attackers were among those killed, said Abdur Rauf Chaudry, an Interior Ministry spokesperson.
At least 46 people were wounded, including several police officials travelling in a van at the back of Musharraf’s motorcade.
It happened just 10 days ahead of a summit of South Asian leaders to be held in Islamabad, and on the same road where a bomb on December 14 also narrowly missed the president.
In the first attempt, high-tech devices in Musharraf’s limousine apparently delayed the explosion by jamming the bomb’s electronic trigger. Thursday’s attackers tried to leave nothing to chance, turning themselves into human bombs.
Musharraf uses the route nearly every day. The fact that attackers could twice get so close to the heavily guarded leader raised serious concerns about his security — and increased speculation that somebody close to Musharraf might have been in on the planning.
”There has been a security lapse,” said Information Minister Sheikh Rashid Ahmed. ”Authorities will investigate, but there has definitely been a lapse.”
”It appears that an organised group is chasing the president. The security system has absolutely collapsed,” ruling party Senator Syed Mushahid Hussain told the private GEO television network.
No suspects have been identified in either attack, although Musharraf has blamed both on Islamic extremists angered by his support for the US-led war in neighboring Afghanistan. Pakistan backed Afghanistan’s hard-line Taliban regime before Musharraf switched sides following the September 11 terror attacks.
The attacks also raised questions about the murky issue of succession in this nuclear-armed nation.
A pro-American four-star general, Mohammed Yousaf Khan, is next in line to take command of the army. Musharraf’s ally, Zafarullah Khan Jamali, is prime minister but with little power.
Musharraf still enjoys popular support after ousting the ineffective government of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in a bloodless 1999 coup.
In April last year a bomb aimed at his motorcade in the southern city of Karachi failed to detonate. Three Islamic militants were sentenced to 10 years in prison.
The latest attack came a day after Musharraf agreed with a coalition of Islamic parties on a timetable for stepping down as army chief but staying on as president. The deal ended a stalemate that had paralysed Parliament and stalled this nation’s return to democracy. — Sapa-AP