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MARCH 5 2010 16:43h
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The bomb triggered a large fire in the town of Tul, part of the northwestern district of Hangu, which is known for sectarian violence.
PESHAWAR, March 5, 2010 (AFP) - A suicide bomber rammed a car packed with explosives into a convoy of Shiite civilians in a Pakistani market on Friday, killing eight people including women and children, police said.
The bomb triggered a large fire in the town of Tul, part of the northwestern district of Hangu, which is known for sectarian violence. It is near Pakistan's lawless tribal belt, which Washington calls a "headquarters" for Al-Qaeda.
Eight people were killed and more than two dozen others were wounded in the blast, which occurred near a petrol station in a market, district police chief Abdur Rashid Khan told AFP.
The convoy was under security escort. Officials say the Pakistani army had started protecting Shiite vehicles following sectarian tensions in the area.
"The dead include two women, two children and four male civilians," said Khan, adding that a curfew had been slapped on the market area.
Local lawmaker Mufti Janan Ahmed said it was a sectarian attack. The 20-vehicle convoy was carrying Shiite travellers coming from the northwestern towns of Parachinar to Kohat, he said.
The bomber ploughed his vehicle into the middle of the convoy, and the victims appeared to be mostly Shiites, the lawmaker said.
"We have found the engine of the vehicle which was used in the attack," said police official Islamuddin Khattak.
The blast destroyed five vehicles in the convoy. Police were battling to extinguish the fire caused by the explosion, he said.
Sectarian violence between majority Sunni and minority Shiite Muslims has killed more than 4,000 people in Pakistan since the late 1980s. Shiites account for about 20 percent of the country's 167 million people.
More than 3,000 people have been killed in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since July 2007 -- a deadly campaign blamed on Islamist militants opposed to the government's alliance with the United States.
But after a significant rise in bloodshed in late 2009, there has been a marked decline in attacks so far this year.
Pakistani officials have equated the trend to the widely suspected death -- although still not confirmed -- of Pakistani Taliban leader Hakimullah Mehsud and military offensives that have disrupted militant networks.
There have been no mass civilian losses or bombings in major cities since a bombing at a volleyball match killed 101 people on New Year's Day. That was around two weeks before the US drone attack that possibly killed Mehsud.
Attacks targeting Shiite Muslims killed 76 people in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, in late December and early February.
Pakistan is under huge US pressure to eliminate Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants who pose a domestic threat and who infiltrate Afghanistan to attack Western forces.
Pakistan's military claims to have made strong gains against Taliban and Al-Qaeda strongholds over the past year, launching major offensives in the northwestern district of Swat and the tribal region of South Waziristan.
Washington says militants use Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt to plot and stage attacks in Afghanistan, where more than 120,000 NATO and US troops are helping Afghan forces battle the Taliban militia.
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