Pakistan bomb blast kills five polio vaccination guard police
PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Jan 8 (Reuters) - A bomb blast in northwest
Pakistan near the Afghan border killed five police on polio vaccination guard
duty and wounded more than 20 on Monday, the latest in a series of attacks by
Islamist militants ahead of the Feb. 8 national elections.
The
Pakistan Taliban, an umbrella group of militants also known as
Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), claimed responsibility in a statement sent to
Reuters.
The
blast hit a truck full of police on their way to guard a polio vaccination
drive in the Bajur tribal district, police official Kashif Zulfikar said.
Islamist militants in Pakistan often target polio vaccination
teams, believing the immunisation effort is a Western tool to spy on them and
make Muslims infertile.
The
TTP has been waging a war against the state for years, seeking to overthrow the
government and replace it with a harsh brand of Islamic rule.
The militants have
ramped up their attacks since they revoked
a ceasefire with the government last year.

No comments