Pak Tea House » Islam, Pakistan, Politics, Taliban, Terrorism » Taliban suicide bomber dressed as schoolboy kills 31 army cadets
Taliban suicide bomber dressed as schoolboy kills 31 army cadets
By Andrew Buncombe, Asia Correspondent

Pakistan’s army suffered a damaging blow after a suicide bomber believed to be in his teens and dressed in school uniform slipped into a military base yesterday and set off an explosion, killing at least 31 soldiers and cadets.
In an incident that triggered fears of a renewed wave of attacks and highlighted the nation’s continued vulnerability to militants, the device was detonated inside a military recruitment camp as cadets were exercising on the parade ground. More than 40 people were also wounded.
As the Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack at the Punjab Regiment Centre in the city of Mardan in north-west Pakistan, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the killings. “Such cowardly attacks cannot affect the morale of the security agencies and the resolve of the nation to eradicate terrorism,” he said in a statement.
Last night there was confusion about the precise age of the bomber. Army officials and intelligence sources said he was a young teenager, with some reports suggesting he was as young as 12. The government issued a statement saying he was 19 or 20, while the Taliban said he was a serving soldier whom they had recruited.
What seems clear is that his outfit – the navy blue uniform of the nearby Aziz Bhatti College for the children of serving army personnel – helped him slip past six separate security check-points. The attack has sparked fresh concerns about a possible new flood of attacks, as vowed by the Taliban. Analysts said that despite a series of military operations against them – the most recent taking place in the nearby Mohmand Agency – the bombing underscores the persistence of militants.
The attack in Mardan was the deadliest strike in the country since 25 December 2010, when a woman with a bomb strapped under her burqa killed 43 people at a UN food distribution point in the tribal district of Bajaur.
The strike in Mardan came on the day Pakistan and India announced they would renew formal talks that were suspended in the aftermath of the November 2008 attacks in Mumbai. One key concern will be the threat of tackling radical Islamic militants, such as those who targeted India’s financial capital with the loss of 165 lives.
In a statement released simultaneously in Delhi and Islamabad, the two countries said new talks would focus on counterterrorism, humanitarian issues, peace and security, the disputed Kashmir region and other border issues.
The statement did not say when the talks would begin but noted that the foreign minister of Pakistan will visit India by July to review their progress. The announcement followed a series of meetings between officials, most recently on the sidelines of a regional summit in Bhutan over the weekend.
Despite the announcement, few in India or Pakistan will expect anything concrete to come from the talks immediately. The neighbours have clashed four times since partition, with Kashmir being the trigger in three of the instances. However, analysts say that if the two sides are engaged there is at least the prospect of progress.
Strategic analyst C Uday Bhaskar, of India’s National Maritime Foundation, said: “I don’t think we can expect anything too quickly – we have seen what happened in Mardan today. But in itself, this is reasonably significant. Since May 1998 (when both India and Pakistan tested nuclear weapons) we have had no option but to remain engaged.”
Rise of the teenage killers
As a bloody Islamist insurgency grips Pakistan with little end in sight, a particularly horrifying trend has emerged – the use of teenage suicide bombers, kidnapped or brainwashed into making the ultimate sacrifice for the Taliban.
Analysts in Pakistan say the practice of militants recruiting schoolboys increased after the Red Mosque siege of 2007. In October 2009, a 13-year-old suicide bomber flung himself in the middle of a military convoy near the Swat Valley, killing himself and 41 others.
Although his exact age is unclear, human rights activists warn the teenager dressed in school uniform who killed 31 people yesterday at an army recruitment centre is part of a worrying new trend. “The Taliban’s recruitment of children has been pretty systematic across the board and we’re starting to see more incidents of them being used as suicide bombers,” said Sam Zarifi, the Asia Pacific director for Amnesty International.
The Washington Times newspaper has reported a trade in children as young as seven being bought and sold for use as suicide bombers. Quoting US and Pakistani officials, the newspaper said the Taliban were paying up to $14,000 (£8,700) for a child. Some stayed in Pakistan, while others were sold on to the Taliban in neighbouring Afghanistan.
The boys are taken to training camps in the inhospitable borderlands between Pakistan and Afghanistan, officials say, where they are indoctrinated in Islamic fundamentalism and violence.
Many teens join the militants willingly – there is little opportunity for advancement in the north-west tribal area, with extreme poverty and little education available, except at religious madrassas.
“Children are particularly impressionable – they are ripe for plunder,” said Mr Zarifi. In places such as the Swat Valley, a former tourist destination seized by militants before being recaptured in 2009, troops have reportedly captured many teenagers who are being indoctrinated, and some say the government needs to do more to help counter the Taliban ideology. “The Pakistani state has yet to announce an education, reintegration policy and public awareness campaigns for such children in the areas under the influence of militancy,” said Raza Rumi, a Lahore-based writer and analyst.
Charlotte McDonald-Gibson
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Filed under: Islam, Pakistan, Politics, Taliban, Terrorism · Tags: Andrew Buncombe, bomber, Pakistan, Taliban








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That’s a beautiful picture there. Thumbs up!
Reminded me of the pakistan army sponsored slaughter of wives and children of Indian soldiers in 2002. Have the poor Pashtuns accomplished anything like that???!!
click on the following link for a tribute to salman taseer in benazir bhutto’s voice in which she recited a poem in her youth,this is a video against religious fanatics & their leaders:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZK2PIAKlgnE
retweet & share on facebook,email as much as possible this beautiful poem.
click on the following link for a tribute to salman taseer in benazir bhutto’s voice in which she recited a poem in her youth,this is a video against religious fanatics & their leaders:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZK2PIAKlgnE
retweet & share on facebook,email as much as possible this beautiful poem.
One pays the price of lowering guards in a war. The tragic incident is purely a matter of negligence on the part of the sentries posted at the entrance. The enemy always strikes when a slackness is observed.
We are in a state of war and no slackness in our defences and vigilance can be tolerated lest we want repetition of such kinds in future as well. There is no use putting the security on high alert after every such incident.
If Pakistan wants to avoid that its society is Talibanized, then the cancer needs to be isolated and the rest needs to be treated.
The best Pakistan can do is to allow the creation of a separate Pushtunistan, letting Pakhtoon lands unite with those north of the Durand line. Next one should put up a fence between Pushtunistan and Punjab. Within Punjab, it would then be much easier to dismantle the Jihadi and Taliban infrastructure.
In its current form, the whole of Pakistan would get consumed.
The politicians cannot trust their bodyguards. The soldiers cannot trust school-children. Pakistan is on a slippery slope of trust.
Each time something like this happens, the Taliban are quick to claim responsibility without inhibition – rather with a tinge of pride. Our analysts, on the other hand, are equally prompt in reassuring that “ye musalman naheen, ye Pakistani naheen”.
@bin Ismail
That is precisely the problem.
@Raj(TOO)
“The best Pakistan can do is to allow the creation of a separate Pushtunistan”
There are 2 problems in this.
1) The first one is what do you do with millions of Pashtuns living in Karachi and elsewhere? Although for this they have the Quaid-e-Azam to guide. Pashtuns need a Quaid to thunder “even if you live in different villages and towns across pakistan, you are a different nation and announce “take your pistol and use it”….:-)
2) The second issue is you have taken Punjabi propaganda that they are civilized compared to the pashtuns too seriously. All the wars, jihadi terrorism, etc were instigated, and started by Punjabi elite. Talibanization of Punjab itself is very deep and extensive. Creation of pashtunistan is no panacea for this.
You reap what you sow! – The Islamization of Pakistan, under Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, and the Sunnification of Pakistan under General Zia ul Haq along with the silence of the masses has led to this. There is NO credible politician in Pakistan who has the backbone to stand up to the mullah. The few who did have been murdered
@Raj
1) Partition of India meant some Muslims decided to stay in India.
2) You take my propaganda too seriously also.
@Raj(TOO)
” You take my propaganda too seriously also. ”
I know!
More amusing, highly entertaining is the chest beating of RAPE (Rich Anglophone Paki Elite) against the mythical mullah.
May allah bless those that were martyred – my prayers are with them and their families.
The Politicians will do nothing as usual as they only care about themselves and are to scared to stand up to the Mullah man! I think the army should form a group and start black operations against extremists. when the mullahs commit such atrocities we need tit for tat reprisals. lets bomb a couple of their madrassas , when they kill a paki politician lets bomb the head of the JUI and any TV station that supports them. The mullah only understands violence so lets talk to them in a language they understand.
Isn’t it ironical that these 31 Army cadets were killed by a mulla and their funeral prayers were led also by a mulla. Double agony for the departed souls and double jeopardy for the nation.
I understand that one of the Martyred cadets was an ahmadi