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Bomb Targeting Police Kills 2 in Pakistan

2 bombs targeting police, government workers kill 2, wound more than 30 in Pakistan

Pakistani Police Say Bomb Kills 6 Near Capital
Pakistani police investigate a bus after a deadly bombings in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Thursday, July 2, 2009. Police say a suicide bomber riding a motorcycle has slammed into the bus carrying defense department employees, killing at least six people
(Vincent Thian/AP Photo)

Bombs targeting police and employees of a Pakistani nuclear facility killed two people and wounded scores more Thursday — the latest attacks to hit Pakistan as it battles Taliban insurgents near the border with Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, a prominent militant commander in the northwest reportedly agreed to halt attacks on security forces there, a move that could help the army in its efforts to eliminate the Taliban leadership in the region.

The attack on a bus carrying workers from Pakistan's main nuclear facility took place in Rawalpindi, which lies next to the capital and is home to the headquarters of Pakistan's military

A suicide bomber riding a motorcycle slammed into the bus with employees of the Khan Research Laboratories, wounding 29 people, senior police official Rana Shahid said.

Shahid originally said six people were killed in the attack, but he later revised that to only 29 wounded — including five seriously. He said the bomber was the sole fatality.

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An AP reporter saw pieces of a charred motorbike lying on the ground, as well as a damaged bus, car and van. Shattered glass and twisted metal littered the road.

Taxi driver Mohammed Ejaz said he saw a young man dressed with a black scarf around his neck revving his motorcycle on the side of the road. "Within moments he zigzagged his way to the bus, and then there was a huge explosion," Ejaz said.

The second attack took place near Peshawar, the main city in the northwest, where a roadside bomb killed two policemen and wounded five more, police official Ghayoor Afridi said.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for either blast, but a series of attacks in recent months have been carried out by Islamist militants with roots in the lawless border regions near Afghanistan, where the army is currently fighting the insurgents.

Earlier Thursday, Maulvi Nazir, a powerful militant chieftain in the frontier region of South Waziristan, declared a cease-fire against security forces, government official Syed Abdul Ghafoor Shah said. The terms of the deal were not made public.

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