July 2007 Pakistan bombings
- Matta, Swat
- Dera Ismail Khan
- Islamabad
- Hub
- Hangu
- Kohat
- v
- t
- e
in Pakistan (since 2001)
‡ indicates attacks resulting in more than 100 deaths
Underline indicates the deadliest terrorist attack/s to date
- 1st Bahawalpur
- 1st Karachi
- 1st Quetta
- 2nd Quetta
- 1st Multan
- 1st Mandi Bahauddin (Ahmadiyya)
- 4th Karachi
- Dargai
- 1st Dera Ismail Khan
- 1st Charsadda
- July bombings ‡
- 2nd Rawalpindi
- 5th Karachi ‡
- 2nd Charsadda
- 3rd Rawalpindi (Bhutto assassination)
- 4th/5th Dera Ismail Khan (January violence)
- 6th Dera Ismail Khan
- 2nd Lahore (Sri Lankan cricket)
- 1st Khyber
- 3rd Lahore
- Chakwal
- 7th/8th Dera Ismail Khan (May attacks)
- 4th Lahore
- 3rd Peshawar
- 5th Lahore
- Usterzai
- 4th Peshawar
- 4th Rawalpindi
- Alpuri
- 6th Lahore
- 5th Islamabad
- 5th Peshawar ‡
- 5th Rawalpindi
- 6th Peshawar
- 6th Rawalpindi
- 7th Lahore
- 1st Dera Ghazi Khan
- 1st Lower Dir
- 6th Karachi
- 1st Lakki Marwat ‡
- 1st Bajaur
- 2nd Lower Dir
- 7th Karachi
- 2nd Khyber
- 3rd Khyber
- 8th, 9th & 10th Lahore
- U.S consulate/Timergarah attack
- 2nd/3rd Kohat
- 8th Peshawar
- 11th Lahore (Ahmadiyya)
- 9th Dera Ismail Khan
- 12th Lahore (Sufi)
- 1st Mohmand ‡
- 13th Lahore (Shia)
- 3rd Quetta
- 2nd Darra Adam Khel
- 8th Karachi (CID)
- 2nd Mohmand
- 2nd Bajaur
- 12th Karachi (Chaudhry Aslam assassination)
- 1st Bannu
- 2nd Mastung
- 20th Peshawar
- 13th Karachi (Jinnah International Airport)
- 14th Quetta
- Wagah border
- 21st Peshawar (school massacre) ‡
- Shikarpur
- 22nd Peshawar
- 15th Lahore
- 14th Karachi
- 3rd Mastung
- Attock
- Camp Badaber
- Taunsa Sharif
- 15th Quetta
- Jacobabad
- 6th Parachinar
- 16th Quetta
- 5th Charsadda (Bacha Khan University)
- 23rd Peshawar
- 16th Lahore
- 17th Quetta
- 3rd Mohmand
- 18th Quetta
- 2nd Khuzdar
- 13th Dera Ismail Khan
- 7th Parachinar
- 17th Lahore
- 24th Peshawar
- Sehwan
- 6th Charsadda
- 8th Parachinar
- 18th Lahore
- 25th Peshawar
- 4th Mastung
- 19th Quetta/9th Parachinar
- Chaman
- 19th Lahore
- 20th Lahore
- 4th Bajaur
- 20th Quetta
- 1st Harnai
- 14th Dera Ismail Khan (Ataullah Shah)
- Jhal Magsi
- 27th Peshawar
- 21st Quetta
- 28th Peshawar
- 5th Mastung/2nd Bannu ‡
- 15th Dera Ismail Khan
- 2018 election violence
- 2nd Orakzai
- 15th Karachi (Chinese consulate)
- 31st Peshawar
- 20th Karachi
- Barkhan
- Bolan
- Havelian
- 3rd Lakki Marwat
- 8th Khyber
- 31st Quetta
- Muslim Bagh
- 32nd Peshawar
- Zhob
- 1st N Waziristan
- Bara
- Khar
- 2nd N Waziristan
- 6th Mastung
- Hangu
- 16th Dera Ismail Khan
- 2nd Gwadar
- Mianwali
- Chilas
- Daraban]
In July 2007, a series of suicide bombings took place across Pakistan in the aftermath of the Lal Masjid siege which resulted in an end to the 10-month truce held by the Waziristan Accord.[1] At least 154 people were killed and more than 230 others were injured in the suicide attacks.
Bombings
14 July
On 14 July 2007, 24 Pakistan Army soldiers were killed in a suicide attack in North Waziristan tribal agency.[1]
15 July
On 15 July 2007, two separate armed attacks occurred in Matta, Swat and Dera Ismail Khan.[2]
The first bombing was a coordinated attack on a military convoy in Matta, a town in Swat District, which killed 16 paramilitary troops and five civilians.[3] According to a security official, the suicide attack involved two cars, one of which hit the convoy from the front causing the most casualties, while the other hit the convoy from the rear. According to witnesses, the twin blasts tore through the roofs of six houses and damaged around thirty nearby shops. An explosives-packed motorcycle was also set off with a remote-controlled device, which had been left in the same vicinity. The security forces immediately cordoned off the area and gunship helicopters started hovering overhead. Several suspects who were thought to be involved were detained by the authorities.[3]
In the second attack, in Dera Ismail Khan, a suicide bomber targeted a police recruitment center, killing at least 28 people and injuring nearly 60 others who were taking their police entrance exams. Twelve policemen and sixteen candidates were among the dead.[3] The suicide bomber blew himself up at the recruiting center’s main reception area. According to the witness accounts, the center was filled with 200 job applicants appearing in written examinations and getting medical checkups.[4][5] A bomb disposal squad responded and defused two live hand grenades which were recovered from the scene.[3]
17 July
On 17 July 2007, a suicide bomber targeted the venue of the district bar council convention, killing 17 people, including two women and injuring more than 50 others in Islamabad. The suicide bomber blew himself up outside the security barrier where the political workers of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the Pakistan Muslim League (N) were waiting for the arrival of the then-Chief Justice Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry.[6]
The attack occurred a few feet away from the PPP’s camp, minutes before the chief justice’s scheduled arrival at the venue near the district courts, adjacent to the headquarters of Islamabad Police. The sound of the blast was heard almost 5 kilometers away at the Zero Point Interchange. About 10 minutes after the incident, the first ambulance arrived at the scene. Around six to eight kilograms of explosive material was used in the attack.[6]
19 July
On 19 July 2007, a suicide car bomber, apparently targeting a convoy of Chinese mining technicians and engineers, killed at least 29 people, including seven policemen, and injured 30 others in Hub, Balochistan.[7][8] The bomber rammed into a police van that was escorting the Chinese. The Chinese remained unhurt in the attack.[9]
In another incident, a suicide car bombing at the gates of a police training academy killed at least 7 people, including a policeman, and injured more than 20 others in Hangu.[10] The car bomber timed his attack to coincide with the arrival of a group of young recruits.[7]
In the third attack, a suspected suicide attack in a mosque used by military personnel killed at least 15 people, including two children in Kohat.[10] The explosion occurred as people were about to offer Isha prayer.[7]
27 July
On 27 July 2007, at about 17:15 PST, a suicide bomber targeting police killed at least 13 people, including seven policemen and injured 71 others at an open-air restaurant in Aabpara Market in Islamabad. According to the Interior Ministry spokesman, the government had received intelligence information about a probable suicide bombing in Aabpara.[11] The blast occurred amid protests by religious students, at the reopening of Lal Masjid to the public, two weeks after the commando raid. After the bombing, police retook control of the mosque and arrested about 50 protesters that resisted.[12]
References
- ^ a b Goldwert, Lindsay (16 July 2007). "Pakistan Militants End Peace Agreement". CBS News. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ Haider, Kamran (16 July 2007). "Pakistani investigators hunt bombers as toll rises". Reuters. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ a b c d Khan, Ismail (15 July 2007). "Suicide Attacks by Militants in Pakistan Kill 49". New York Times. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ "Pakistani bomber kills 26". The Denver Post. 15 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ "Cease-fire is over, say Pakistani militants". Los Angeles Times. 16 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ a b Baqir Sajjad, Syed (18 July 2007). "Another carnage visits capital: •17 killed in suicide bombing •PPP reception camp targeted at CJ rally venue". Dawn. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ a b c Haider, Zeeshan (19 July 2007). "Three Pakistan suicide bombs kill 52 in one day". Reuters. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ "Chinese workers feared dead in Pakistan bombing". China Daily. Associated Press. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ "Suicide Bombs Kill Dozens in Pakistan". New York Times. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ a b "Scores killed in Pakistan attacks". BBC News. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ "Bombing, mosque riot rock Islamabad". China Daily. Associated Press. 28 July 2007. Retrieved 31 May 2017.
- ^ Jan, Sadaqat (28 July 2007). "Bombing, Mosque Riot Rock Islamabad". Washington Post. Associated Press. Retrieved 31 May 2017.