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Darra Adam Khel in the 70’s
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Watch "Gun Markets of Darra Adam Khel, Pakistan! 🇵🇰" on YouTube
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Darra Adam Khel
Darra Adam Khel (Urdu/Pashto: درہ آدم خیل) is a town in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, located between Peshawar and Kohat, very close to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. It is inhabited by Pashtuns of the Afridi clan, the Adam Khel. The town consists of one main street lined with shops, with some alleys and side streets containing workshops. Darra Adam Khel is devoted entirely to the production of ordnance.
Economy
Located in between Kohat and Peshawar, a wide variety of firearms are produced in the town, from anti-aircraft guns to pen-guns. Weapons are handmade by individual craftsmen using traditional manufacturing techniques, usually handed down father-to-son. The quality of the guns is generally high and craftsman are able to produce replicas of almost any gun. Guns are regularly tested by test-firing into the air.[1] Darra is controlled by the local tribesmen.[2] Darra Adam Khel is an unkempt village of two story wood and adobe buildings in the sand stone hills near the Kohat Frontier region. It is the gun factory of the Tribal Areas, located around 40 kilometres (25 mi) south of Peshawar on the road to Kohat. The drive takes around forty minutes. Darra (Adam Khel denotes a clan of the Afridi Tribe) is inside Pakistan but beyond Pakistani law—and very nearly beyond comprehension. Most of the people here seem to make or sell just one thing, i.e., guns, while the second largest business of the inhabitants is transport.
In the arcades off the main road are workshops. Hundreds of closet-sized rooms where men and boys make working copies of the entire world's guns with nothing more than hand tools and a small drill press. The tools are astonishingly primitive, yet the forges turn out accurate reproduction of every conceivable sort of weapon, from pen pistols and hand-grenades to automatic rifles and anti-aircraft guns. The copies are so painstakingly reproduced that even the serial number of the original is carried over. A Darra gunsmith, given a rifle he hasn't seen before, can duplicate it in around ten days. Once the first copy is made, each additional copy takes two or three days due to the templates created. Handguns, being more complex, take a little longer.
In Darra, almost three-fourths of the people are in the gun trade. Pen pistols and walking stick guns are popular here. Around 400-700 guns are made in Darra each day and the number is rising with the adoption of more tools. These guns are more than enough for the Pashtuns themselves. Many guns find their way to and from Afghanistan. In the 1980s, heroin was shut down in the markets after consultation with the tribal elders due to foreign pressure, but guns, known as the ornaments of a Pashtun, could not be eliminated. Manufacturing of heavy ammunition, however, has been closed down. Travel by foreigners to Darra is forbidden due to security reasons. Travelers can drive by bus or car through Darra without a permit but its not advisable because tribal police (Khasadar) visits the market to check for any locale rules and law violation. foreigner without permits are taken to secure places to avoid any misshape . The Darra arms trade first fired up in 1897. This arms trade has won a fame for the Adam Khel Afridis who are the major inhabitants of the town.
Tourism
Foreigners were once allowed to visit the town if they had a permit, obtainable from the Home Office in Peshawar (permits are no longer issued due to 'security concerns', however it is possible to take the Peshawar-Kohat bus and get off at the town, which will usually also involve being sent back by the local tribal police called 'khasadars'). Some 'fixers' in Peshawar offer to arrange a visit for a considerable sum. In this case a bodyguard will accompany visitors whilst they are in the town, and it may be possible to test-fire weapons for a small fee. Michael Palin visited the town as part of his Himalaya television series, as did Ethan Casey in his travel book Alive and Well in Pakistan while Australian film director Benjamin Gilmour's feature drama Son of a Lion set in Darra Adam Khel premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival 2008.
#Peshawar#Pakistan#Kohat#Khyber Pakhtunkhwa#Federally Administered Tribal Areas#Ethan Casey#Darra Adam Khel#Adam Khel
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Darra Adam Khel
Darra Adam Khel (Urdu/Pashto: درہ آدم خیل) is a town in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, located between Peshawar and Kohat, very close to the Federally Administered Tribal Areas. It is inhabited by Pashtuns of the Afridi clan, the Adam Khel. The town consists of one main street lined with shops, with some alleys and side streets containing workshops. Darra Adam Khel is devoted entirely to the production of ordnance.
Economy
Located in between Kohat and Peshawar, a wide variety of firearms are produced in the town, from anti-aircraft guns to pen-guns. Weapons are handmade by individual craftsmen using traditional manufacturing techniques, usually handed down father-to-son. The quality of the guns is generally high and craftsman are able to produce replicas of almost any gun. Guns are regularly tested by test-firing into the air.[1] Darra is controlled by the local tribesmen.[2] Darra Adam Khel is an unkempt village of two story wood and adobe buildings in the sand stone hills near the Kohat Frontier region. It is the gun factory of the Tribal Areas, located around 40 kilometres (25 mi) south of Peshawar on the road to Kohat. The drive takes around forty minutes. Darra (Adam Khel denotes a clan of the Afridi Tribe) is inside Pakistan but beyond Pakistani law—and very nearly beyond comprehension. Most of the people here seem to make or sell just one thing, i.e., guns, while the second largest business of the inhabitants is transport.
In the arcades off the main road are workshops. Hundreds of closet-sized rooms where men and boys make working copies of the entire world's guns with nothing more than hand tools and a small drill press. The tools are astonishingly primitive, yet the forges turn out accurate reproduction of every conceivable sort of weapon, from pen pistols and hand-grenades to automatic rifles and anti-aircraft guns. The copies are so painstakingly reproduced that even the serial number of the original is carried over. A Darra gunsmith, given a rifle he hasn't seen before, can duplicate it in around ten days. Once the first copy is made, each additional copy takes two or three days due to the templates created. Handguns, being more complex, take a little longer.
In Darra, almost three-fourths of the people are in the gun trade. Pen pistols and walking stick guns are popular here. Around 400-700 guns are made in Darra each day and the number is rising with the adoption of more tools. These guns are more than enough for the Pashtuns themselves. Many guns find their way to and from Afghanistan. In the 1980s, heroin was shut down in the markets after consultation with the tribal elders due to foreign pressure, but guns, known as the ornaments of a Pashtun, could not be eliminated. Manufacturing of heavy ammunition, however, has been closed down. Travel by foreigners to Darra is forbidden due to security reasons. Travelers can drive by bus or car through Darra without a permit but its not advisable because tribal police (Khasadar) visits the market to check for any locale rules and law violation. foreigner without permits are taken to secure places to avoid any misshape . The Darra arms trade first fired up in 1897. This arms trade has won a fame for the Adam Khel Afridis who are the major inhabitants of the town.
Tourism
Foreigners were once allowed to visit the town if they had a permit, obtainable from the Home Office in Peshawar (permits are no longer issued due to 'security concerns', however it is possible to take the Peshawar-Kohat bus and get off at the town, which will usually also involve being sent back by the local tribal police called 'khasadars'). Some 'fixers' in Peshawar offer to arrange a visit for a considerable sum. In this case a bodyguard will accompany visitors whilst they are in the town, and it may be possible to test-fire weapons for a small fee. Michael Palin visited the town as part of his Himalaya television series, as did Ethan Casey in his travel book Alive and Well in Pakistan while Australian film director Benjamin Gilmour's feature drama Son of a Lion set in Darra Adam Khel premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival 2008.
#Peshawar#Pakistan#Kohat#Khyber Pakhtunkhwa#Federally Administered Tribal Areas#Ethan Casey#Darra Adam Khel#Adam Khel
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History of Suiside Attacks in Pakistan
April 1, 2011: At least 41 people were killed in twin suicide bomb attacks at the Sufi shrine in Dera Ghazi Khan district, in Pakistan's central province of Punjab, as worshippers gathered for a festival. The Taliban claimed responsibility.
March 31, 2011: At least 13 people were killed in a suicide bomb attack on the leader of one of Pakistan's most influential Islamic parties and a long–standing ally of the Afghan Taliban movement. It was the second suicide bomb attack on the leader of Jamiat Ulema–i–Islam in two days. Twelve people were killed when a suicide bomber on a motorbike attacked a crowd in Swabi waiting for Mr Rehman to address them.
November 5, 2010: A suicide bomber killed 68 people at a mosque in the northwest area of Darra Adam Khel. Hours later, grenades thrown into a second mosque, near Peshawar, killed at least two people.
October 2010: 25 people were killed in a blast at a shrine in Punjab province. Another attack at a Karachi shrine two weeks earlier killed nine and was claimed by the Taliban.
July 10, 2010: Double suicide bombing kills 102 people in village of Kakaghund in northwestern Pakistan.
April 5, 2010: Taliban fighters using rocket-propelled grenades, car bombs and suicide vests tried to storm the United States consulate in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province. Five security guards were among seven people killed during the raid in Peshawar. Several explosions in the area caused buildings to collapse.
February 3, 2010: A bomb blast near a girls' school in northwestern Pakistan killed three American soldiers apparently involved in a US-British programme to train the country's paramilitary Frontier Corps. Two US military personnel were wounded in the roadside bomb attack on a convoy in Lower Dir, which also killed a Pakistani paramilitary and at least three children.
January 1, 2010: At least 88 people were killed when a suicide car bomber blew up himself and his vehicle as people gathered to watch a volleyball game in the village of Shah Hasan Khan, in Bannu district of north-west Pakistan.
December 28,2009: A suicide bomber kills 43 people at a Shia procession in Karachi. The Taliban have claimed the attack and threatened more violence.
October 24, 2009: The Pakistani Taliban targeted an airbase believed to be one of the country's secret nuclear weapons facilities among a wave of suicide bombings that killed at least 25 people.
October 15, 2009: The Taliban launched pre-emptive strikes against targets across Pakistan, killing 39 people in five separate attacks as it sought to deter a planned assault on its stronghold near the Afghan frontier.
October 12,2009: A suicide bomber thought to be about 12 years old blew himself up in a busy market in north-west Pakistan, killing at least 41 people and injuring dozens more.
October 9, 2009: A car bomb destroyed a market in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing at least 125 people. The attack was thought to be part of a Taliban campaign.
September 18, 2009: At least 33 people were killed when a suicide car bomber rammed into a Shia-owned hotel in north-west Pakistan. A further 70 were injured by the bomb, which flattened the market place surrounding the hotel in the town of Kohat, in North West Frontier Province, on the edge of Pakistan's Taliban-controlled tribal area.
June 9, 2009: At least 11 people were killed and 70 injured when suspected Islamic militants attacked a five-star hotel in Peshawar. The militants drove through the main gate of the Pearl Continental Hotel in a pickup truck, spraying security guards with bullets before ramming their vehicle into the building and detonating it.
June 5, 2009: A suicide bomber killed 40 people attended Friday prayers at a mosque in north-west Pakistan. The attack took place in the Upper Dir district, close to Swat valley, where the army has been conducting a major offensive against the Taliban.
March 27, 2009: A suicide attack on a mosque on the Peshawar-Torkham highway kills 83 people and leaves more than 100 injured.
October 10, 2008: At least 85 people are killed and about 200 wounded in an attack at an anti-Taliban meeting in a tribal area.
September 20, 2008: A suicide attack at the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad kills at least 60 people. CCTV footage showed the truck carrying the biggest ever bomb used by terrorists in Pakistan being driven into the gates of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad
February 16, 2008: A suicide bomber rams his car into the election office of an independent candidate in the city of Parachinar, killing at least 47.
January 10, 2008: A suicide bomber walks up to policemen stationed outside the High Court in Lahore and sets off his explosives, killing 22 people, most of them police.
January 7, 2008: Al-Qaeda-linked militants in northwest Pakistan attack two offices of a government-sponsored peace movement and kill eight people.
December 21, 2007: A suicide bomber kills at least 41 people in a mosque in northwest Pakistan during Eid festival prayers.
December 17, 2007: A suicide bomber kills 10 military recruits in the northwestern town of Kohat.
November 24, 2007: Twin suicide car bomb attacks kill 15 people in Rawalpindi, on the eve of the return of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from exile in Saudi Arabia.
October 25, 2007: Suspected suicide bomber kills 21 people, including 17 soldiers, in an attack on an army convoy in the northwestern Swat valley.
October 19, 2007: At least 139 people killed in suicide bomb attack on Benazir Bhutto's motorcade as she is driven through Karachi after arriving home from eight years in self-exile. The attack is one of the deadliest in Pakistan's history.
Sept 13, 2007: At least 15 soldiers killed in suicide bombing in an army canteen near Islamabad.
September 11, 2007: Suicide bomber kills 16 people in northwest Dera Ismail Khan.
September 4, 2007: Two suicide bombers kill 25 in Rawalpindi.
July 27, 2007: Suicide bomb attack in restaurant near Islamabad's Red Mosque kills 13 people, most of them policemen.
July 19, 2007: Three suicide attacks in a single day in three towns kill at least 52 people.
July 17, 2007: Suicide bomber kills 16 people outside court in Islamabad, where country's suspended Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was due to speak.
July 15, 2007: 16 people, most of them paramilitary soldiers, are killed in ambush on patrol in Swat valley in North West Frontier Province (NWFP). Separately, suicide bomber targets police recruiting centre in Dera Ismail Khan in NWFP, killing 29.
July 14, 2007: Suicide car-bomber kills 24 paramilitary soldiers and wounds 29 in North Waziristan.
#Taliban#Peshawar#Pakistan#Khyber Pakhtunkhwa#Karachi#Islamabad#History of Suiside Attacks in Pakistan#Darra Adam Khel#Al-Qaeda
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On Martyrs' Day of Shaheed-e-Azam Bhagat Singh -23 March
The way we should remember Shaheed Bhagat Singh in 2021..
For all those who are reading this, and are in their 30s or above, what were you doing at the age of 21?
Suppose, when one of us was a 21 year old, most of his earnings, a few lunch boxes, a laptop, few books and a couple of barely used phones went to the Autorickshaw wallahs of Mumbai.
The reason - he was never able to learn the art of getting inside a Mumbai Local.
Being from a city where everyone would often get down from a tram, do some marketing (yah, that’s our word for shopping), perhaps have some puchkas , watch a Bumba da starrer, argue with a complete stranger on the Argentinian economy, and still hop back on the still slowly moving beauty on rails, to occupy the same seat - The experience of the Mumbai Locals was overwhelming for him.
This is one of us’s story - when he was 21 years of age- A CONTEMPORARY COMMON MAN.
But, At 21 years of age, Bhagat Singh along with a friend, pumped 8 bullets into a British Officer, he thought was responsible for the death of Lala Lajpat Rai, a leading ideologue and freedom fighter of India.
4 months later, he along with another friend - exploded two non-lethal smoke bombs in the Central Legislative Assembly of New Delhi - shouted slogans - distributed pamphlets and courted an arrest.
He was 21.
While in Jail, he went on a 116 day satyagraha and hunger strike to demand better conditions for the Indian prisoners.
The British jail authorities tried hard to break the strike. They even filled the water pitchers in the jail cell with Milk, hoping that either the strikers would die of thirst, or break their hunger strike. They failed.
His hunger strike was broken only after the death of fellow satyagrahi, Jatindra Nath Das
and an emotional appeal made by his father.
He utilised his ongoing trials to become the voice of a subjugated nation - ready to break the chains of the British Raj.
A whole nation sat up to take notice - Nehru went to Jail, just to meet him - Jinnah dedicated his speeches to him - he became a national symbol of the Indian resistance to British Colonialism.
There was a noose hanging above his head, and he wanted the Britishers to deliver latest newspapers, pen and paper in his jail cell.
He was 22.
The then Viceroy of India, Lord Irwin had to declare an emergency in India on 1st May 1930, just to quell the nationwide demonstrations and to bring in an ordinance to set up a fast track court to prosecute him.
During the 1 year 11 month period, when his trial was on - He along with his associates, became a torch of light - inspiring a nation, which had long given up the idea of self respect - He was as much a hero for an Afridi making illegal weapons and bombs for our freedom in Darra Adam Khel, as he was for an Iyer Lady in Coimbatore, secretly donating all the little jewellery she had, for the cause of the Indian freedom struggle.
The British Raj was rattled - Mahatma Gandhi realised that he wasn’t the most popular Indian anymore - the Lords in the British Parliament lodged protests - the regular Indians poured on the streets despite the beating and humiliations - The Indian poets, thinkers and writers caught the tailwind of an idea whose time had finally come.
At 7:30 PM, on 23rd march 1931, he was secretly hanged by the British, a day (11 hours actually) before the announced schedule, for waging a war on the King.
He was 23.
He had written:
“Generally a wrong meaning is attributed to the word revolution… Our understanding is that BOMBS AND PISTOLS DO NOT MAKE REVOLUTION. THE SWORD OF REVOLUTION IS SHARPENED ON THE WHETTING-STONE OF IDEAS.”
He was not from a poor family- he wasn’t someone who had ‘nothing to lose’. He wasn’t an undereducated brain washed emotionalist. He wrote in and edited newspapers - won competitions of scholarships at a very young age - started a youth organisation in his teens - he too could have chosen to lead a comfortable life like the others - he was well aware of the consequences of his actions - he still chose to do, what he did.
He did not become a hero when he shot a British officer - He became one when he courted a voluntary arrest.
He did not become a national icon for his act of violence - he became one for challenging the British Raj with the power of an Idea and a voice which was just and right.
It has been 90 years since, and Shaheed Bhagat Singh still lives - not because he picked up a gun - He lives because he picked up the sagging spirits of a nation and taught us all the true value of our freedom.
Jai Hind. Inqalab Zindabad. (Translation: Hail the motherland. Long live the revolution)
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It is said that a Darra gunsmith, given a rifle he hasn't seen before, can duplicate it in around ten days. Once the first copy is made, each additional copy takes two or three days. The tools are primitive, yet the forges turn out accurate reproduction of every conceivable sort of weapon, from pen pistols and hand-grenades to automatic rifles and anti-aircraft guns. The copies are so painstakingly reproduced that even the serial number of the original is carried over.
Artisanal weapon makers.
But that’s all changing now, because of new laws & licensing requirements.
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Fata University Non Teaching Jobs 2022 Latest
Fata University Non Teaching Jobs 2022 Latest Date Posted: 31 March, 2022 Category / Sector: Government Newspaper: Aaj Jobs Education: Primary | Middle | Matric | Bachelor | Master | B.com | M.com | BBA | MBA | LLb | Others Vacancy Location: Darra Adam Khel, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa KPK, Pakistan Organization: Fata University Job Industry: Education Jobs Job Type: Temporary Job Experience: 02…
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Latest Jobs 2022 Fata University Darra Adam Khel
Latest Jobs 2022 Fata University Darra Adam Khel
Latest Jobs 2022 Fata University Darra Adam Khel Last To Apply 07 April 2022 Profess Associate Profess Assistant Profess Lecture Latest Jobs 2022 Fata University Darra Adam Khel Last To Apply 07 April 2022 For New Jobs Information Click Here For Following on Twitter Click Here
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History of Suiside Attacks in Pakistan
April 1, 2011: At least 41 people were killed in twin suicide bomb attacks at the Sufi shrine in Dera Ghazi Khan district, in Pakistan's central province of Punjab, as worshippers gathered for a festival. The Taliban claimed responsibility.
March 31, 2011: At least 13 people were killed in a suicide bomb attack on the leader of one of Pakistan's most influential Islamic parties and a long–standing ally of the Afghan Taliban movement. It was the second suicide bomb attack on the leader of Jamiat Ulema–i–Islam in two days. Twelve people were killed when a suicide bomber on a motorbike attacked a crowd in Swabi waiting for Mr Rehman to address them.
November 5, 2010: A suicide bomber killed 68 people at a mosque in the northwest area of Darra Adam Khel. Hours later, grenades thrown into a second mosque, near Peshawar, killed at least two people.
October 2010: 25 people were killed in a blast at a shrine in Punjab province. Another attack at a Karachi shrine two weeks earlier killed nine and was claimed by the Taliban.
July 10, 2010: Double suicide bombing kills 102 people in village of Kakaghund in northwestern Pakistan.
April 5, 2010: Taliban fighters using rocket-propelled grenades, car bombs and suicide vests tried to storm the United States consulate in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province. Five security guards were among seven people killed during the raid in Peshawar. Several explosions in the area caused buildings to collapse.
February 3, 2010: A bomb blast near a girls' school in northwestern Pakistan killed three American soldiers apparently involved in a US-British programme to train the country's paramilitary Frontier Corps. Two US military personnel were wounded in the roadside bomb attack on a convoy in Lower Dir, which also killed a Pakistani paramilitary and at least three children.
January 1, 2010: At least 88 people were killed when a suicide car bomber blew up himself and his vehicle as people gathered to watch a volleyball game in the village of Shah Hasan Khan, in Bannu district of north-west Pakistan.
December 28,2009: A suicide bomber kills 43 people at a Shia procession in Karachi. The Taliban have claimed the attack and threatened more violence.
October 24, 2009: The Pakistani Taliban targeted an airbase believed to be one of the country's secret nuclear weapons facilities among a wave of suicide bombings that killed at least 25 people.
October 15, 2009: The Taliban launched pre-emptive strikes against targets across Pakistan, killing 39 people in five separate attacks as it sought to deter a planned assault on its stronghold near the Afghan frontier.
October 12,2009: A suicide bomber thought to be about 12 years old blew himself up in a busy market in north-west Pakistan, killing at least 41 people and injuring dozens more.
October 9, 2009: A car bomb destroyed a market in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing at least 125 people. The attack was thought to be part of a Taliban campaign.
September 18, 2009: At least 33 people were killed when a suicide car bomber rammed into a Shia-owned hotel in north-west Pakistan. A further 70 were injured by the bomb, which flattened the market place surrounding the hotel in the town of Kohat, in North West Frontier Province, on the edge of Pakistan's Taliban-controlled tribal area.
June 9, 2009: At least 11 people were killed and 70 injured when suspected Islamic militants attacked a five-star hotel in Peshawar. The militants drove through the main gate of the Pearl Continental Hotel in a pickup truck, spraying security guards with bullets before ramming their vehicle into the building and detonating it.
June 5, 2009: A suicide bomber killed 40 people attended Friday prayers at a mosque in north-west Pakistan. The attack took place in the Upper Dir district, close to Swat valley, where the army has been conducting a major offensive against the Taliban.
March 27, 2009: A suicide attack on a mosque on the Peshawar-Torkham highway kills 83 people and leaves more than 100 injured.
October 10, 2008: At least 85 people are killed and about 200 wounded in an attack at an anti-Taliban meeting in a tribal area.
September 20, 2008: A suicide attack at the Marriott Hotel in Islamabad kills at least 60 people. CCTV footage showed the truck carrying the biggest ever bomb used by terrorists in Pakistan being driven into the gates of the Marriott hotel in Islamabad
February 16, 2008: A suicide bomber rams his car into the election office of an independent candidate in the city of Parachinar, killing at least 47.
January 10, 2008: A suicide bomber walks up to policemen stationed outside the High Court in Lahore and sets off his explosives, killing 22 people, most of them police.
January 7, 2008: Al-Qaeda-linked militants in northwest Pakistan attack two offices of a government-sponsored peace movement and kill eight people.
December 21, 2007: A suicide bomber kills at least 41 people in a mosque in northwest Pakistan during Eid festival prayers.
December 17, 2007: A suicide bomber kills 10 military recruits in the northwestern town of Kohat.
November 24, 2007: Twin suicide car bomb attacks kill 15 people in Rawalpindi, on the eve of the return of former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from exile in Saudi Arabia.
October 25, 2007: Suspected suicide bomber kills 21 people, including 17 soldiers, in an attack on an army convoy in the northwestern Swat valley.
October 19, 2007: At least 139 people killed in suicide bomb attack on Benazir Bhutto's motorcade as she is driven through Karachi after arriving home from eight years in self-exile. The attack is one of the deadliest in Pakistan's history.
Sept 13, 2007: At least 15 soldiers killed in suicide bombing in an army canteen near Islamabad.
September 11, 2007: Suicide bomber kills 16 people in northwest Dera Ismail Khan.
September 4, 2007: Two suicide bombers kill 25 in Rawalpindi.
July 27, 2007: Suicide bomb attack in restaurant near Islamabad's Red Mosque kills 13 people, most of them policemen.
July 19, 2007: Three suicide attacks in a single day in three towns kill at least 52 people.
July 17, 2007: Suicide bomber kills 16 people outside court in Islamabad, where country's suspended Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry was due to speak.
July 15, 2007: 16 people, most of them paramilitary soldiers, are killed in ambush on patrol in Swat valley in North West Frontier Province (NWFP). Separately, suicide bomber targets police recruiting centre in Dera Ismail Khan in NWFP, killing 29.
July 14, 2007: Suicide car-bomber kills 24 paramilitary soldiers and wounds 29 in North Waziristan.
#Taliban#Peshawar#Pakistan#Khyber Pakhtunkhwa#Karachi#Islamabad#History of Suiside Attacks in Pakistan#Darra Adam Khel#Al-Qaeda
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#KP Governor for Promoting locally made Darra Adam Khel #Weapons
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Today’s Outlook: PM To Inaugurate Housing Scheme In Nowshera
Today’s Outlook: PM To Inaugurate Housing Scheme In Nowshera
Notes from the newsroom Photo: Imran Khan/Facebook Here are some stories from across Pakistan which we are expecting to follow today (Wednesday). Prime Minister Imran Khan will visit Nowshera and Peshawar. He is expected to inaugurate a housing project for low-income groups: Jalozai Housing Scheme in Nowshera. In Peshawar, he will review the work done on the Peshawar-Darra Adam Khel road and…
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People provided free treatment at eye camps Peshawar-The Directorate General Health Services Khyber Pakhtunkhwa organised ‘free eye camps’ in sub-division Peshawar, sub-division Kohat, and tribal districts Bajaur, Orakzai, and Khyber, during last two months. The provincial Health departments’ ‘Eye Care Services’ programme organised these free eye camps in sub-division Peshawar areas Rahimabad, Kohi Hassan Khel, BHU Gul Akbar, and FATA University Darra Adam Khel, BHU Tor Chaper and Zarghun Khel areas of sub-division Kohat. Similarly, camps were also held in Nawagi, Mamund and Barang hospitals of Bajaur, Shaho Khel Lalbaz Gora, Kalaya, Yakh Kndawo, Anjani BHU of Orakzia, and Sheen Kamar and Spina Tiga areas of tribal district Khyber under the supervision of DG Health Services Dr Niaz Muhammad. In these free eye camps patients were provided services like free check-up, provision of medicines, reading glasses to the presbyopic patients and registration of patients for contract surgeries. The aim of the free eye camps was to provide quality health services to patient having eye problems at their door steps. https://timespakistan.com/people-provided-free-treatment-at-eye-camps/8064/
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