2002 Karachi bus bombing

The 2002 Karachi bus bombing was one of a series of deadly strikes on Westerners in Pakistan in 2002. The blast killed 14 people and wounded another 40. The attack took place in Karachi, Sindh.[1]

2002 Karachi bus bombing
Memorial to the French victims in Cherbourg, France
LocationKarachi, Sindh, Pakistan
DateMay 8, 2002
TargetFrench people
Attack type
Suicide car bomb
Deaths14
Injured40

Details

On May 8, 2002, a man driving a car bomb stopped next to a bus in Karachi outside the Sheraton Hotel. He detonated the car, ripping the bus apart, and killing himself, 11 Frenchmen, and two Pakistanis. The Frenchmen were engineers working with Pakistan to design an Agosta 90B-class submarine for the Pakistani Navy. About 40 others were wounded.[2]

Al-Qaeda was blamed for the blast. On September 18, 2002, a man named Sharib Zubair, who was believed to have masterminded the attack, was arrested. In 2003, two men were sentenced to death for the bombing by a Karachi court. The suspected bombmaker, Mufti Mohammad Sabir, was arrested in Karachi on September 8, 2005.[3] There were several convictions in the case, though Pakistani courts acquitted three defendants by 2009.[4]

Karachigate

Contrary to official announcements by the Pakistani and the French governments at the time, it is now thought to be unlikely that those responsible for the attack had links to al-Qaeda. In 2007, anti-terrorism judge Jean-Louis Bruguiere, assigned to lead the investigation into the bombing, was replaced by two investigating magistrates, Marc Trevidic and Renaud Van Ruymbeke. The former opened a new line in the investigation: that the attack was linked to the halting of kickback.[5] The resulting scandal has been dubbed "Karachigate".[6][7]

An investigation is currently underway in France to establish the extent to which former French Prime Minister Édouard Balladur and former French President Nicolas Sarkozy were implicated in the sale of kickbacks to Pakistani officials.[7] Sarkozy was allegedly involved in accepting kickbacks from Pakistan to fund the presidential campaign of Balladur. When Jacques Chirac came to power, he cancelled the Pakistani officials' kickbacks, angering many people in Pakistan.[6]

gollark: The originally intended and very poorly-defined osmarkscalculator™ way to do this would just be to make `deriv` a higher-order function, to have currying, and to probably have some kind of weird way in which values which can be substituted into are implicitly functions.
gollark: It can differentiate things.
gollark: Why not?
gollark: You cared en ough to say that you cared 0 about it.
gollark: I'm insulted by you leaving out *my* CAS.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.