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Sifwat Ghayur, chief of the Frontier Constabulary in the lawless Khyber Pakhtunkhwa region, formerly known as the Northwest Frontier Province, has been killed in a suicide bombing attack while he sat in his truck in busy traffic in downtown Peshawar. His three bodyguards also died in the attack 4 August.The killer, reportedly a teenage boy, ran up to the stopped vehicle and blew himself up. Three different militant groups claimed responsibility for the death.

Ghayur was fearless, honest to a fault and a tireless opponent of the militant Islamic groups that are wracking Pakistan’s border area with Afghanistan. “This is a great loss,” said a provincial official. “He was the best among the best.”

Pakistan awarded him its highest medal for bravery on 5 August and the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial government observed a day of mourning.

Links to other sites: ABC News, Central Asia Online, Dawn

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Hamid Karzai’s inauguration for a second term as president of Afghanistan has come with unusually high security in the capital Kabul, and renewed pleas to step up the fight against corruption, from former US President Bill Clinton and other world leaders. Regular flights in and out of the city have been cancelled, citizens urged to take a holiday and stay home, and heavier than usual patrols are out on the streets to ward off a possible Taliban attack.

Pakistan attack kills 15

Over the border in Peshawar, Pakistan, a suicide bomber killed 15 people and injured scores at a court building not far from the Pearl Continental Hotel where nine people died in June. Al Jazeera links the latest blast to a new military push: “The military launched its offensive nearly three weeks ago, pitting about 30,000 Pakistani troops against an estimated 10 to 12,000 Taliban fighters in South Waziristan.”

Links to other sites: Aljazeera,

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The latest in a string of attacks in Pakistan’s Northwest Frontier Province that have targeted military, police and intelligence services took place early Friday 13 November in Peshawar, where a gunfire was followed by a bomb blast at the Inter-Services Intelligence’s provincial headquarters. Ten people died, at least 60 are wounded and several are believed to be buried under the rubble of the building, according to government officials. In another attack in the province’s Bannu District a suicide bomber drove into a police station and killed six people, injured 23.

Links to other sites: Aljazeera, CNN

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Updated 10:15  Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) – Two UN employees were killed Tuesday night 9 June in a bomb blast that killed 16 and demolished the five-star Hotel Pearl Continental in Peshawar, capital of Northwest Frontier Province (NWFP) in Pakistan. One, a UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) employee from Serbia, was on mission in Peshawar. Aleksandar Vorkapic, an information technology specialist in the UNHCR office in Belgrade was on his first emergency mission for the organization, the UNHCR office in Geneva announced Wednesday morning. He leaves a wife and three children.

The other death, a woman who is a Philippines citizen, was working for the World Food Programme, a spokesperson at the UNHCR office in Peshawar has told GenevaLunch. Several other UNHCR employees who were staying at the Pearl Continental Hotel have been evacuated to Islamabad, the spokesperson says. The Geneva office of UNHCR cites news reports as saying a Unicef staff person has died.

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Geneva, Switzerland (GenevaLunch) - The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) visited Mingora in Pakistan’s Swat valley again today 3 June to evaluate the needs of the civilian population remaining in the area.

Simon Schorno, an ICRC delegate now at its Geneva headquarters, who recently returned from the area told GenevaLunch that ICRC  is seeking agreement from the parties to the conflict to set up a a sub-delegation in Mingora, scene of much fighting in the last two weeks. It hopes to reach agreement shortly.

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Fears are growing in Pakistan, reports AFP, that a series of bomb attacks around the country indicate that militants are seeking revenge this way for the government’s offensive against the Taliban. The number of deaths from several bomb attacks in Peshawar and Dera Ismail Khan 28 May has risen to 15. The new attacks follow a deadly one in Lahore earlier in the week.

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