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Blast Kills 8 Mourners at Pakistani Funeral

Blast kills 8 mourners at funeral for Shiite cleric in northwestern Pakistan

A bomb killed eight mourners at the funeral of a slain Shiite cleric Friday in northwestern Pakistan, triggering rioting and heightening sectarian tension in the volatile region.

The U.S. aims missiles at al Qaeda strongholds in tribal areas of Pakistan.

Police said the attack in the city of Dera Ismail Khan wounded another 28 people and was followed by riots in which a mob burned shops and vehicles and pelted police with rocks. The U.S. this week shifted consular staff from the region because of rising insecurity.

Nuclear-armed Pakistan already faces a wave of Islamist violence that risks destabilizing the country as the West seeks its help in fighting al-Qaida and the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

Police said the motive of Friday's bombing was probably sectarian because it followed a string of tit-for-tat attacks between Sunni and Shiite Muslims in the city.

The growing presence of al-Qaida and the Taliban, both of whom are overwhelmingly Sunni, in northwestern Pakistan has heightened tensions with minority Shiites in the region.

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Militants have concentrated their fire on Pakistani security forces and U.S. troops on the other side of the Afghan border. However, Pakistani officials say their ranks have been swelled by banned Pakistani extremist groups that view Shiites as heretics.

Friday's victims were attending the funeral of cleric Allama Nazir Shah Naqvi, who was fatally shot earlier in the day. Police officer Nasir Satti said investigators believed the bomb was detonated by remote control.

Some of the 28 people wounded were in critical condition, said Farid Mehsud, a doctor at a city hospital.

Dera Ismail Khan is about 60 miles from Pakistan's lawless tribal areas, where militants have expanded their influence steadily over the past several years.

American forces in Afghanistan are believed to have staged some 20 missile strikes on militant targets in Pakistan since August, including one on Wednesday that for the first time hit a target beyond the tribal areas.

Pakistan's pro-Western government called in the U.S. ambassador on Thursday to protest the strikes, which it says deepen anti-American sentiment and undermine public support for its own efforts against extremism.

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