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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

DATE=10/7/1999
TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT
TITLE=PAKISTAN - RELIGIOUS KILLINGS (L)
NUMBER=2-254773
BYLINE=AYAZ GUL
DATELINE=ISLAMABAD
CONTENT=
VOICED AT: 
INTRO: A bomb has exploded on a passenger bus in the 
Pakistani city of Karachi, killing at least one person 
and injuring many others.  At least 38 people have 
died across Pakistan in terrorist attacks and 
religious violence during the past 10 days.  There are  
no  claims of responsibility.  Prime Minister Nawaz 
Sharif says those involved in the sectarian violence 
have been trained in camps in neighboring Afghanistan.
TEXT:  Pakistani authorities say a powerful bomb 
ripped through the passenger bus during Karachi's 
evening rush hour.  They say some of the people 
injured in the attack are in critical condition. 
Police are calling the blast a terrorist attack, but 
it is  not  clear if the explosion is linked to the 
latest round of sectarian violence across Pakistan.
The violence between Sunni and Shiite groups has left 
dozens of people dead in less than two weeks.  There 
have been  no  claims of responsibility for any of the 
religious killings, but extremist Shiites and those 
from the Sunni sect, the majority in Pakistan, are 
blaming one another for the killings.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif told reporters those who 
were arrested for the sectarian killings have admitted 
they were trained at terrorist camps in Afghanistan.
            /// SHARIF ACT IN URDU, FADE UNDER ///
Mr. Sharif says Pakistan has asked the dominant 
Taleban Islamic movement to immediately shut down the 
camps.  The Prime Minister says his country has made 
it clear to Taleban authorities that the presence of 
such camps on Afghan territory is  not  acceptable to 
Pakistan. Mr. Sharif did  not  say who is running the 
camps.
Afghanistan's Taleban group says there are  no  
terrorist camps in the territory it controls.
Mr. Sharif's allegations have taken observers by 
surprise, because Pakistan has been a strong supporter 
of the Taleban movement, and one of the three 
countries to recognize the group's government in 
Afghanistan.
The Prime Minister's statement follows repeated 
accusations by the United States that the Taleban has 
allowed Islamic terrorists led by Saudi dissident 
Osama bin Laden to operate camps in Afghanistan.  
Washington accuses Mr. Bin Laden of planning last 
year's bomb attacks on two U-S embassies in east 
Africa, which left more than 200 people dead.
The Taleban has rejected several U-S requests for Mr. 
Bin Laden to be turned over for trial.
Washington has imposed sanctions on the Taleban, which 
controls 90 percent of the war-ravaged country.  The 
United States is urging other countries to take 
similar action unless the Islamic Taleban hands over 
Osama bin Laden.   (SIGNED)
NEB/AG/WTW
07-Oct-1999 14:39 PM EDT (07-Oct-1999 1839 UTC)
NNNN
Source: Voice of America
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