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FBI Investigates Karachi Blast Site As Consulate Opens 

U.S. authorities, including the FBI, investigate the area surrounding the bomb attack at the U.S. Consulate in Karachi Sunday

KARACHI, June 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - A U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) team visited the scene of the devastating car bomb attack on the U.S. consulate in Karachi for the third consecutive day on Monday, June 17, as the consulate will reopen Tuesday, June 18, with “enhanced security,” a consulate official said. 

According to U.S. daily newspaper, USA Today, nearly 20 FBI and other law enforcement officials, many of whom were flown in to investigate the bombing, are currently in Pakistan investigating the bomb attack. 

Pakistani police said the FBI agents were trying to find clues about the device which triggered Friday’s explosion, which killed 12 people, all Pakistanis, and injured more than 50. 

“They used cranes to lift some of the damaged cars and then took a close look at the vehicles outside the consulate in search of the evidence,” said a police official, requesting anonymity. 

Police and paramilitary troops have also been deployed to search for vital evidence, he said, adding the road where the bomb went off will be closed until further notice. 

Witnesses said the FBI team arrived in the morning and spent several hours taking notes and holding discussions. 

The FBI agents collected wreckage and videotaped the scene of the attack, assembling evidence that might tell them whether the powerful explosion was detonated by a suicide attacker or by remote control, reports the Washington Post.

An official added that FBI investigators have not determined what vehicle carried the bomb. They said the high-roof Suzuki van originally thought to have ferried the bomb to the consulate had been taken away for closer examination. 

The building sustained only moderate damage, but the intensity of the blast, which blew a 13-foot (four-meter) hole in the consulate wall and a two-foot (60-centimeter) crater in the road, flung the Suzuki van across the road and into a park. 

Although investigators initially believed it was a suicide attack, they now suspect the bomb could have been a remote-controlled device planted in a driving school-owned Toyota Corolla carrying four women. 

The victims in the van were later determined to be a Karachi man and his niece, and a physician who was to be married the following day, reports the Post. 

Sindh police chief Syed Kamal Shah is due to brief reporters later today on the investigation's progress. 

Although no one has been arrested, U.S. intelligence officials in Pakistan believed they believe that Al-Qaeda or an affiliated group carried out the bombing, but they said they had no evidence, reports USA Today. 

Police said they have so far taken around 40 witness statements including from some of the 51 injured. They are focusing their attentions on local groups purportedly linked with the Al-Qaeda network and said they were taking seriously a claim of responsibility from a previously unknown group called Al-Qanoon, or the Law, news agencies reported. 

The group said in a fax sent Sunday to the Pakistani newspaper Umat that if the country’s President, General Pervez Musharraf, didn’t resign, there would be more attacks, reports the Post. 

Retired Pakistani general Talat Masood, a security analyst, said Al-Qaeda’s involvement “cannot be ruled out. Surely, this is the price we are paying for our support to the international community in the war against terrorism,” reports USA Today. 

Sindh’s home secretary Brigadier Mukhtar Sheikh on Sunday, June 16, said the bomb blast was a message to the United States and a warning to Pakistan to stop supporting the U.S.-led “war against terrorism.” 

Sheikh, said that although the culprits have not been identified, authorities were sure the attack was linked to the ongoing battle against “militants.” 

He also warned of further attacks. “We are working on different leads, but the message of the blast was for America and that is why the U.S. consulate was targeted,” he told Agence France-Presse (AFP) on Sunday. 

“It sounds a warning to the Pakistani government as well, as we are an ally of the international coalition against terrorism,” he said, referring to Islamabad’s efforts to track down Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters fleeing from Afghanistan. 

Pakistani authorities, for their part, are also searching for a fugitive named Naeem Bukhari, leader of Lashkar-I-Jhangvi, described as the top suspect in the attack, and also wanted in the kidnapping and slaying of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. 

The consulate itself will reopen Tuesday with “enhanced security,” a U.S. official, who declined to be identified, said without elaborating. 

“Our full American and Pakistani staff will be back at work and the consulate will begin resuming normal operations. But in the near future, the U.S. Consulate building will only be open to American citizens,” said the official, reports news agencies. 

The U.S. Embassy in Islamabad as well as consulates in Lahore and Peshawar reopened Monday, after being shut down after the Friday attack.  

 

 

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