http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\06\10\story_10-6-2009_pg1_1

11 killed in Peshawar PC blast



 * Attackers fire at security guards from one vehicle, blow up second inside 
hotel's compound 
* 60 injured, 2 foreigners including Russian UN official among dead

PESHAWAR: A massive truck bomb ripped through the five-star Pearl Continental 
hotel in Peshawar on Tuesday killing 11 people and wounding 60.

The attackers entered the compound on two vehicles at about 10:30pm, spraying 
the security guards at the hotel gate with bullets from one and blowing up the 
other in the hotel parking.

"It was a suicide attack," city police chief Sefwat Ghayur told AFP. "There are 
two foreigners among the dead," provincial information minister Mian Iftikhar 
Hussain said. He did not reveal their nationalities.

A witness said he first heard shooting and then there was loud bang that left 
the area in thick smoke. The explosion was followed by a power failure.

Forty vehicles parked in the compound were destroyed and the building was 
seriously damaged. A large crater was seen in the parking area. A portion of 
the building was completely destroyed.

The explosion was heard several kilometres away from the site and shook nearby 
buildings, shattering the windows of many of them.

Khyber Road is a sensitive locality with the NWFP Assembly and several 
government and military buildings.

A number of foreigners, most of them associated with aid agencies, were staying 
in the hotel. 

UN official: A private TV channel said the dead included UNHCR official 
Alexander Joseph from Russia. Sixteen other UNHCR officials were injured and 
one was missing. The injured also included an official from the World Food 
Programme, another from the World Health Organisation and two from UNICEF, it 
said. Another TV channel said a foreign female journalist was also injured.

Edhi sources claimed receiving dead bodies of three foreigners.

News channels said that hotel manager Kamal Ahmad was missing. Two PIA 
hostesses were also injured and a captain was missing.

A Bomb Disposal Squad (BDS) official told reporters at least 500 kilogrammes of 
explosives were used in the attack. 

Police cordoned off the area following the explosion and closed Khyber Road for 
traffic. The hotel was evacuated and an emergency was imposed in Peshawar's 
hospitals.

There were unconfirmed reports that employees of a private American company had 
hired a portion of the hotel.

The NWFP information minister condemned the attack and told a private TV 
channel it would not affect his government's resolve against the Taliban.

Most of the injured were hotel employees and were taken to Lady Reading 
Hospital.

The Associated Press said US officials were in negotiations to make the 
premises an American consulate. Citing two senior US officials in Washington, 
it said the State Department had been in negotiations with the hotel's owners 
to either purchase the facility or sign a long-term lease there to house a new 
American consulate in Peshawar. The officials said they were not aware of any 
sign that US interest in the compound had played a role in it being targeted.

Lou Fintor, spokesman for the US Embassy in Islamabad, said all diplomatic 
personnel were accounted for. "At this point we have no reports that any 
Americans were at the scene," he said.

President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the 
attack and grieved the loss of innocent lives, and resolve to continue the 
government's commitment to eradicate terrorism. manzoor ali shah/ 
agencies/daily times monitor

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