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British Airways has halted all flights to Pakistan following the bombing of the Marriott
Hotel in Islamabad,
a spokesman for the airline has confirmed this morning.
"We have temporarily suspended our flight
operations in Pakistan
following Saturday's suicide attack," Sohail Rehman, a spokesman for British
Airways, said.
The last flight from London
to Islamabad, the only destination served by the
airline in Pakistan,
operated yesterday. It departed as rescuers picked their way through the
smouldering ruins of the hotel, looking for more bodies after the huge bomb
devastated the building in one of country's worst terrorist attacks.
The death toll stood this morning at 53,
with 266 wounded, after a bomber blew up a lorry containing 600kg of explosive
on Saturday evening. The body of Ivo Zdarek, the Czech Ambassador, was among
those pulled from the rubble. Mr Zdarek, 47, moved to Islamabad only in August. Two Americans, said
to be US Defence Department employees, were also killed in the blast but their
identities were not revealed.
The bombing happened after dusk on
Saturday, when hundreds of people were dining in several restaurants inside the
hotel. Closed-circuit TV footage showed the driver of the lorry ramming into
the security gates but failing to breach a second barrier.
Rehman Malik, an Interior Ministry
official, said that the attacker intended to drive into the lobby of the hotel
and had apparently tried to convince the guards to lower the second barrier. When
they would not, he blew himself up in the lorry's cabin. The guards then tried
to put out the fire in the lorry, and it was several minutes before the second,
enormous blast devastated the Marriott.
Abdur Rehman, 45, who was on security duty,
said: "The bomber fired several shots in the air when we tried to stop him,
scaring us all away. Then after a few minutes the truck exploded with a massive
blast, setting the building on fire." Mohammed Latif, who was in the hotel car
park, said: "The entire area was engulfed in thick smoke and pieces of glass
and debris was flying all over. People, many of them stained in blood, came
rushing out from a side gate." Akbar Khan, a World Bank employee, was dining
with friends at one of the hotel's restaurants when he heard a thud, and then a
huge blast. "I saw people scaling 12ft walls at the back of the hotel to save
their lives," Mr Khan, whose head and arms were injured, said.
Rescue teams searched the blackened
building room by room but were hampered by fires still burning some areas 24
hours after the explosion. "There could be some charred bodies inside," a
senior official said.
At least two Britons were among the
hundreds wounded in the attack, which had the luxury hotel in the capital's
high-security zone in flames for several hours, destroying the five-storey
building. Both were discharged from hospital after treatment for minor
injuries.
At the entrance to the Marriott, a
favourite venue for foreigners, journalists and wealthy Pakistanis, a crater
50ft wide and 20ft deep bore witness to the power of the explosion.
Many of the victims were killed or injured
by the intense heat of the blast, which also burst gas pipelines. "Bodies were
charred beyond recognition," a rescue worker said. Doctors at the city's main
hospital said that, with dozens of wounded in a critical condition, the death
toll could rise.
No one has claimed responsibility for the
attack, but investigators said that it bore the hallmarks of an al-Qaeda
operation. "The purpose was to destabilise democracy," Yousuf Raza Gilani, the
Prime Minister, said. He added that Chechen, Uzbek or Arab militants operating
from the border areas could have been involved.
Mr Gilani said that the bomber had attacked
the Marriott only after tight security prevented him from reaching the
Parliament building or the Prime Minister's office, which are a few hundred
yards from the hotel. The explosion took place just two hours after President
Zardari had made his first address to Parliament, calling for terrorism to be
rooted out. Mr Gilani, Mr Zardari, the chief of army staff and MPs were at a
state dinner half a mile away when the bomb went off.
The Interior Minister suggested that Tehrik
e-Taleban e-Pakistan (TTP), an militant group suspected to be linked to al-Qaeda
, was involved in the attack.
Source:
The Times (London)
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