Friday, July 18, 2008

Woman And Child In Afghanistan Are Stopped In Suicide Bombing Attempt


The article on this story is here at Khaleej Times Online and I want to put up a telling part of the story:


It is rare that women carry out attacks in Afghanistan's insurgency, which is led by the Taleban movement that was in government between 1996 and 2001 and is said to have support from extremist circles based in Pakistan.

Jahangir said the woman and the child could not speak either of Afghanistan's main languages, Dari and Pashtu, but spoke Pakistan's Urdu and Arabic.


The reason I have showcased that information is to show that this reeks of al Qaeda, not the Taliban ...OR, it shows the al Qaeda influences going on in the Taliban network. The facts are simple, the woman and this 13 yr old CHILD were caught getting their suicide belts ready behind a provincial governor's building. So, they were caught. But the crucial thing here is that this use of females and children is tactical stuff right out of the War in Iraq. It shows how influences and fighters from Iraq have shifted to Pakistan and Afghanistan.

The signs are all there that as the Americans begin to claim total victory in Iraq, the entire battlefield of world jihad is going to descend on Afghanistan and what the Pakistanis don't seem to get is that at some point in time, the forces of the Taliban and al Qaeda who are holed up in Pakistan are going to start getting tired of running into NATO troops across the border and simply start doing their operations INSIDE Pakistan.

The fact that we might just see these women and children suicide bombers being used in Afghan cities is going to make things very tough for NATO and Afghan security forces. And also, make things very bloody.


Woman would-be suicide bomber caught in Afghanistan

GHAZNI, Afghanistan - Police arrested a woman and a 13-year-old child they alleged were suicide bombers planning to kill a provincial governor in central Afghanistan, officials said Friday.
The pair were arrested late Thursday as they were fixing explosives to themselves behind the governor's residence in Ghazni, provincial government spokesman Ismail Jahangir told AFP.
‘They both were attempting to get into governors' compound and target the governor and high-ranking officials,’ Jahangir said.
It is rare that women carry out attacks in Afghanistan's insurgency, which is led by the Taleban movement that was in government between 1996 and 2001 and is said to have support from extremist circles based in Pakistan.
A suicide attack in May in southwestern Farah province was apparently carried out by a woman in an all-covering burqa.
Jahangir said the woman and the child could not speak either of Afghanistan's main languages, Dari and Pashtu, but spoke Pakistan's Urdu and Arabic.
The pair were presented to the media several hours after their arrest.
The deputy police chief of Ghazni, Abdul Ghani, told reporters the woman had confessed she was from Multan, in Pakistan, and had come to the city -- the capital of a province of the same name -- to carry out a suicide attack.
She claimed to have entered the country with three associates who had not been arrested, Ghani said. The police chief did not confirm the boy was also meant to be involved in the bombing or his relationship with the woman.
A 14-year-old boy from Pakistan's tribal belt was arrested with explosives in Ghanzi last year and told police he had been tasked with assassinating the governor.

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