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The destruction left by the bombing AP Photo/Khalil ur Rehman

Car bomb kills 20 people in eastern Pakistan

The bombing is said to underscore the reach of Al-Qaeda and Taliban militants who normally target Pakistan’s northwest.

A CAR BOMB has killed 20 people and injured more than 100 in Pakistan’s third largest city.

The bomb exploded outside a petrol station in the Pakistani city of Faisalabad on Tuesday, badly damaging the station and an office of Pakistan’s state-run airline though the initial target was not immediately clear.

The district in the important industrial city is home to commercial, police and government buildings.

Islamist militants seeking to overthrow the government have bombed hundreds of police, army, commercial and civilian targets in Pakistan over the past three years.

Most have been in the northwest close to the Afghan border where the insurgents are at their strongest.

Tuesday’s bombing apparently caused secondary explosions at the fuel station, adding to the destruction, Faisalabad police chief Aftab Cheema said.

TV footage showed piles of bricks, and chunks of twisted metal from cars strewn across the neighborhood. Rescue workers struggled to pull victims out of the rubble.

Cheema said 20 people were killed and more than 100 were wounded. “This was a terrorist activity,” he said.

Militants have rarely struck Faisalabad, which is 260 kilometres south of Islamabad, but it lies in Punjab province where Islamist extremist groups have deep roots and are believed to be growing in strength.

The U.S. has pushed the Pakistani government to crack down on Islamist extremist groups on its borders, saying they threaten not only Western troops engaged in the Afghan war effort but also the stability of Pakistan itself.

The army has launched offensives in the northwest, but questions remain over whether the state has fully severed ties with extremist networks it once supported for foreign policy goals.

- AP

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