Terrorist incidents in Pakistan in 2004
This is a list of terrorist incidents in Pakistan in 2004.
February - May 2004
- 28 February:- An apparent suicide bomber was killed and three worshipers were injured in an attack on Imambargah in Satellite Town, Rawalpindi.[1]
- 2 March:- At least 42 persons were killed and more than 100 wounded when a procession of the Shia Muslims was attacked by Deobandi extremists at Liaquat Bazaar in Quetta.[2]
Main article: 2004 Quetta Ashura massacre
- 10 April:- At least one person was killed and three others were wounded when a car bomb exploded in a parking area near a Hall where hundreds of people were attending a concert by the Indian pop group Sonu Nigams.
- 3 May:- A car bomb in south-western city of Gwadar killed three Chinese engineers and injured 10 other people.[3]
- 7 May:- A suicide bomber attacked a crowded Shia mosque in Sindh Madrassatul Islam in Karachi, killing at least 15 worshipers. More than 100 people were also injured, 25 of them critically in the attack. One person was killed in the riots that followed the attack.[4]
- 14 May:- Six members of Shia family was shot dead in Mughalpura locality of Lahore.[5]
- 26 May:- Two car bombs explode within 20 minutes of each other outside the Pakistan-American Cultural Center and near the US consul general's residence in Karachi, killing two men and injuring more than 27 people, mainly policemen and journalists.[6]
- 30 May:- A senior Deobandi religious scholar and head of Islamic religious school Jamia Binoria, Mufti Nizamuddin Shamzai, was gunned down in his car while leaving his home in Karachi.[7]
- 31 May:- A suicide bomber blew up the Imambarghah Ali Raza mosque in Karachi in the middle of evening prayers, killing 16 worshipers and injuring 35. Two people were killed in riots over the mosque attack and Shamzai's assassination.[8]
June - August 2004
- 10 June:- Gunmen opened fire on a convoy carrying the then corps commander Lt Gen Ahsan Saleem Hyat leaving 11 people dead in Karachi. The corps commander who escaped unhurt later became the vice chief of army staff under General Pervez Musharraf. This was the first such attack on the Pakistan Army, not counting the earlier assassination attempts on General Pervez Musharraf who was also the President of the country, since the military began operations in Waziristan in 2004.[9]
- 30 July:- Assassination attempt on the Prime Minister-elect Shaukat Aziz, while he was campaigning for by-election in Fateh Jang, Attock District, Punjab. Even though he survived the attempt, nine people were killed due to the suicide bombing.[10]
- 2 August:- Chief Minister of Balochistan province Jam Mohammad Yousaf escaped an assassination bid when unidentified persons fired at his convoy killing one of his bodyguards and injuring two others.[11]
- 8 August:- At least eight people were killed and over 40 others injured when two bombs exploded in quick succession near the Jamia Binoria Madressah, Karachi.[12]
- 31 August:- Three persons were killed and three others injured in a bomb blast at a shop in the Balochi town of Kalat.[13]
September - December 2004
- 21 September:- Suspected Sipah-e-Sahaba members gunned down at least three members of a Shi'a family in a sectarian attack in Dera Ismail Khan.[14]
- 1 October:- A suicide bombing left 25 people dead and dozen injured at a Shia mosque after Friday prayers in the eastern city of Sialkot.[15]
- 7 October:- A powerful car bomb left 40 people dead and wounded over 100 during a Sunni(Deobandi) rally to commemorate Maulana Azam Tariq, assassinated leader of Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan, in the central city of Multan. This was most probably the retaliation of Sialkot suicide attacks exactly a week ago.[16]
Main article: 2004 Multan bombing
- 10 October:- An explosion by a suicide bomber at a mosque used by Shia Muslims in Lahore killed at least four people and left eight people injured.[17]
- 10 December:- At least 10 people were killed and 30 injured in a bomb explosion at a market in city of Quetta. The bomb exploded near an Army truck, as Balochistan Liberation Army claimed responsibility[17]
References
- ↑ Rezvan Malick. "1 killed, 3 injured amid Suicide attack near Imambargah in Rawalpindi" Pakistan Times, 29 February 2002
- ↑ Carnage in Pakistan Shia attack BBC News
- ↑ "Pakistan car bomb kills Chinese" BBC News, 3 May 2004
- ↑ 'Suicide attack' hits Karachi mosque BBC News
- ↑ Six of a Shia family shot dead in Mughalpura Daily Times
- ↑ 2 explosions near US consul’s house Daily Times
- ↑ Mufti Shamzai killed in ambush Daily Times
- ↑ 16 die in Karachi mosque explosion Daily Times
- ↑ Karachi Army Chief Survives Assassination Attempt Voice of America
- ↑ Pakistan's PM designate survives assassination attempt CBC Canada
- ↑ "Baluchistan CM escapes bid on life" The Tribune India, 2 August 2004
- ↑ S. Raza Hassan. "Twin blasts leave 8 dead in Karachi" Dawn, 9 August 2004
- ↑ "Blast in Pakistan leaves 3 dead" The Tribune India, 31 August 2004
- ↑ Animesh Roul. "Sipah-e-Sahaba: Fomenting Sectarian Violence in Pakistan" The Jamestown Foundation: Global Terrorism Analysis, 27 January 2005
- ↑ Bomb carnage at Sialkot mosque BBC News
- ↑ Blast at SSP rally kills 40 in Multan Daily Times
- 1 2 Blast hits Pakistan Shia mosque BBC News
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