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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • Updated
    5
    days
    ago

    At least 18 slain as blasts rip through 2 mosques in Pakistan village

    Two bombs exploded near separate mosques killing at least 18 people in a remote area of northwestern Pakistan. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Mushtaq Yusufzai, Producer, NBC News

    PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- At least 18 people were killed as they prayed when explosions ripped through two mosques in Pakistan on Friday, villagers and government officials said.

    The blasts occurred in Bazdara, which is located in a mountainous region close to the restive Swat valley. Villagers put the death toll at 33. However, authorities said 18 people had died.

    "The roof of [one of the mosques] collapsed in the blast," local resident Shah Jehan said.

    Pakistani security forces cordoned off the area while villagers searched the rubble for survivors.

    "The death toll is likely to rise as some of the injured people are in a serious condition," local government official Sajid Khan added.

    No group immediately claimed responsibility for the bombings. The Pakistani military has maintained a heavy presence in the region since its 2009 offensive against militants in nearby Swat.

    Related:

    • Full Pakistan coverage from NBC News

    This story was originally published on Fri May 17, 2013 10:59 AM EDT

    87 comments

    I recently attended a pot luck dinner at a Lutheran church. There were no deaths.

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    Explore related topics: pakistan, blast, featured, swat, updated, bazdara
  • 15
    Jan
    2013
    4:03pm, EST

    Blasts hit Syrian university, killing dozens

    SANA via AP

    In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian people gather at the site after an explosion hit a university in Aleppo, Syria, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013. Two explosions struck the main university in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Tuesday, causing an unknown number of casualties, state media and anti-government activists said.

    By Ben Hubbard, The Associated Press

    Twin blasts inside a university campus in Syria's largest city on Tuesday set cars ablaze, blew the walls off dormitory rooms and left more than 80 people dead, anti-regime activists said.

    What caused the blasts remained unclear.

    Anti-regime activists trying to topple President Bashar Assad's regime said his forces carried out two airstrikes. Syrian state media, for its part, blamed rebels fighting the Syrian government, saying they fired rockets that struck the campus.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Aleppo, Syria's largest city and a commercial capital, has been harshly contested since rebel forces, mostly from rural areas north of the city, pushed in and began clashing with government troops last summer.

    'We escaped death': Syrian refugees struggle with cold, hunger and uncertainty

    Entire neighborhoods have been destroyed by the fighting, frequent shelling and airstrikes by government forces who seek to dislodge the rebels.

    The competing narratives of the two blasts at the city's main university highlight the difficulty of confirming reports from inside Syria. The Syrian government bars most media from working in the country, making independent confirmation difficult, and both anti-regime activists and the Syria government sift the information they give the media in an effort to boost their cause.

    Aleppo's university is in the city's northwest, a sector controlled by government forces, making it unclear why government jets would target it, as opposition activists claim.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look at the violence that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    Syria's state news agency blamed the attack on rebels, saying they fired two missiles at the university. It said the strike occurred on the first day of the mid-year exam period and killed students and people who were staying at the university after being displaced by violence elsewhere. The agency did not say how many people were killed and wounded.

    The scale of destruction in videos shot at the site, however, suggested more powerful explosives had been used than the rockets the rebels are known to possess.

    The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights cited students and medical officials as saying that 83 people were killed in the blasts. Several of the more than 150 people injured were in critical condition, it said.

    The group, which relies on a network of contacts inside Syria, said it was unclear what caused the blasts.

    Syria's crisis began in March 2011 with protests calling for political reform. The conflict has since turned into civil war, with scores of rebel groups fighting Assad's forces throughout the country.

    The U.N. says more than 60,000 people have been killed.

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    16 comments

    Let's just go ahead and keep muslims over there,and not here

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    Explore related topics: syria, university, blast, assad, aleppo
  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    5:53pm, EDT

    Sudan says Israeli jets bombed arms factory

    EPA

    A picture made available on Oct. 24, 2012 shows a fire following an explosion at Yarmouk military factory in Khartoum, Sudan. The fire has been contained, but it is still unclear what triggered the explosion.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Sudan on Wednesday blamed Israel for a huge explosion and fire at an arms factory in Khartoum that killed two people. Israel's defense minister declined to comment.

    "Four military planes attacked the Yarmouk plant. ... We believe that Israel is behind it," Sudan Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman told reporters, adding that the planes appeared to approach the site from the east.

    Asked by Israel's Channel Two News about Sudan's accusations, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said: "There is nothing I can say about this subject."


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Similarly, U.S. officials who spoke with NBC News on condition of anonymity, said, "We have no comment. We can’t help you on this.”

    Some Pentagon officials suggested that the explosion could have been accidental and said there were “conflicting reports” about its cause.


    Sudan, which analysts say is used as an arms-smuggling route to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip via neighboring Egypt, has blamed Israel for similar blasts in the past, but Israel either has refused to comment or said it neither admitted or denied involvement.

    The powerful explosion at the Yarmouk Military Industrial Complex in southern Khartoum rocked Sudan's capital before dawn Wednesday, sending detonating ammunition flying through the air and causing panic, Sudan's official news agency and local media reports said. Nearby buildings were damaged by the blast, their roofs blown off and their windows shattered, according to the reports.

    New fighting in Sudan's Darfur region, several killed

    "Sudan reserves the right to strike back at Israel," Osman said, saying two citizens had been killed and that the plant had been partially destroyed. Another person was seriously injured, he added.

    Officials said earlier there were no reports of deaths, although some residents had suffered from smoke inhalation.

    Around 300 people gathered in the evening at the courtyard of a government building where the Sudanese Cabinet was meeting in an emergency session, shouting "Death to Israel" and "Remove Israel from the map."

    Conflict displaces 900,000 in Sudan border areas

    "Israel is a country of injustice that needs to be deterred," Vice President Ali Osman Taha, standing next to President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, told the crowd. "This attack only strengthens our firmness."

    The governor of Khartoum state initially had ruled out any "external" cause for the blast, but officials later showed journalists a video from the vast site showing a huge crater next to two destroyed buildings and what appeared to be a rocket lying on the ground.

    Sudan forces burned, looted remote border village: activists

    Osman said an analysis of rocket debris and other material had shown that the attack had been engineered by Israel, which Sudan views as an enemy.

    Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Rahim Mohamed Hussein and senior officials visited the site of the explosion and held an emergency meeting with top army generals while security forces sealed off the area surrounding the complex and halted traffic.

    Israel kills 3 Hamas militants after Qatari emir leaves Gaza

    In 2009, a convoy carrying weapons in northeastern Sudan was targeted from the air, killing dozens. It was widely believed that Israel carried out the attack on weapons shipment headed for Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip. Israel never confirmed or denied that. Sudanese parliamentarians denied that weapons were transported in the area.

    In 1998, the United States used cruise missiles to knock out a Khartoum pharmaceutical factory suspected of links to al-Qaida in the aftermath of the terror group's bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people.

    Sudan has long been a major hub for al-Qaida militants and a transit for weapon smugglers and African migrant traffickers.

    NBC News' Senior Investigative Producer Robert Windrem, the Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    167 comments

    Israel didn't do this. How do I know? Because the factory was only damaged, not destroyed. It was likely an industrial accident, and Jews are always a great scapegoat for the blame.

    Show more
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  • 26
    Jun
    2012
    1:23pm, EDT

    Suspected gas blast destroys homes, kills child in England

     

    One child was killed after blast that ripped through homes outside of Manchester. Msnbc.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By msnbc.com staff

    An explosion in England left at least one child dead after five terraced houses were destroyed in a suspected gas blast.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Firefighters continue searching through the rubble in Manchester for anyone who might be trapped. One man was taken to the hospital with severe burns, BBC reported.

    "It's like a war zone - tiles that have blown off literally across the streets, there's just debris everywhere. It's mad," Alex Perkins, who lives nearby, told BBC. "It's just empty, there's nothing there, just bricks on the floor, just rubble."


    Georgian Ulla, who also lives on the street, told the BBC her house "shook like it was an earthquake."

    "All the lights shook - I thought someone was breaking in to begin with," she added. "First thing that I saw was all the toys on the floor. Apparently there are kids that live in the house."

    The explosion was felt half a mile away, and shock waves broke windows, set off car alarms and littered the area with fragments of roof slates. At least 100 homes were evacuated, and 30 firefighters were on the scene.

    Craig Needham, who runs a nearby garage, told the BBC that he and his employees ran outside when they heard the blast.

    "We could just see a black plume. We thought a bomb had dropped," he said.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • Analysis: Egypt's big turn under the Muslim Brotherhood
    • Iraq orders Voice of America, 43 other media outlets to close
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    4 comments

    ALLERGIC TO STUPID PEOPLE THIS HAPPENED TO ME ! ! ! You were killed as a child in England? Im so sorry to hear that.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: explosion, gas, blast, uk, macnhester
  • 17
    Jun
    2012
    7:26am, EDT

    Blasts hit northern Nigeria churches

    By msnbc.com news services

    A least two explosions shook the town of Zaria in northern Nigeria's Kaduna state on Sunday, the emergency services said, and at least one of them was at a church, a security official said. 

    Reuters reported two explosions, while The Associated Press quoted a Nigerian official as saying that a third explosion had rocked the area. There was no explanation for the different accounts but such discrepancies are common in the immediate aftermath of such events.



    Follow @msnbc_world

    Islamist sect Boko Haram has often attacked church services in Nigeria, split roughly evenly between Christians and Muslims. 

    Witness: Attack on Christians in Nigeria kills at least 15

    Boko Haram, which has become increasingly radicalised and meshed with other Islamist groups in the region, including al-Qaida's north African wing, is the leading security threat to Nigeria, Africa's top oil producer and a member of OPEC. 

    Regular attacks on Sunday church services are usually claimed by the sect, which says it is fighting to reinstate an ancient Islamic caliphate that would adhere to strict sharia (Islamic law). 

    US warns of attacks on Westerners in Nigeria

    Islamist militants attacked two churches in Nigeria last Sunday, spraying the congregation of one with bullets, killing at least one person, and blowing up a car in a suicide bombing at the other, wounding 41. 

    The Islamists' leader, Abubakar Shekau, has justified attacks on Christians as revenge for killings of Muslims in Nigeria's volatile "Middle Belt", where the largely Christian south and mostly Muslim north meet. 

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    • China's space mission a test of docking precision

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world


    81 comments

    "The day is coming that whosoever kills you, will think that they are doing GOD'S service. And these things they do, because they know not The Father nor Me." John 16:2-3

    Show more
    Explore related topics: nigeria, blast, featured
  • 7
    Dec
    2011
    7:53am, EST

    Afghan bombs kill at least 78 people in two days

    By msnbc.com wire services

    KABUL, Afghanistan - A roadside mine killed 19 civilians, including children, and injured another five when it exploded in the southern Afghan province of Helmand on Wednesday, the provincial government told Reuters.

    The strike on the minibus came a day after at least 59 people were killed in sectarian attacks in three cities across the country, and refocused attention on the fragile Afghan security situation.


    •  'Grim new precedent': Dozens die as sectarian violence erupts in Kabul

    The vehicle was driving on a road in Helmand province's volatile Sangin district — a Taliban stronghold — when it hit the bomb, said Daoud Ahmadi, a spokesman for the Helmand government, according to The Associated Press.

    After Tuesday's attacks, the largest of which targeted a Shiite Muslim shrine in the capital Kabul, Afghan President Hamid Karzai cancelled a planned visit to Britain to return straight home, wiping out any residual optimism from an international conference about the future of Afghanistan, held on Monday in Germany.

    • Afghanistan allies pledge to stay for the long haul

    At least five children were among the dead in the Helmand attack, Ahmadi said. No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack — a common situation when bombs kill civilians.

    On Tuesday, twin bombings on Shiite Muslims celebrating the holiday of Ashoura sparked fears that attacks in Afghanistan might be taking on a sectarian dimension for the first time. Ashoura honors the death of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, in 680 A.D.

    A suicide bomber slaughtered dozens of Shiite worshippers and wounded more than 160 others Tuesday outside a Kabul shrine where hundreds had gathered to worship.

    One U.S. citizen was also among the dead, according to a statement issued by the American embassy in Kabul. The deceased was not a government employee, U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Megan Ellis said, but declined to give further details.

    The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), responsible for security across much of the country, says it is winning the war against the Taliban.

    But if Tuesday's bombing sets a precedent for violence between the Sunni Muslim majority and the Shiite minority, it would severely stretch army and police resources.

    • Emotional scenes as funerals are held for victims of Afghan sectarian attacks

    At a funeral ceremony on Wednesday for victims of the attack, hundreds of Shiite Muslims bore aloft the bodies of the dead, chanting that because they had been killed at a Muslim ceremony, they had died in the name of the Prophet Muhammad.

    "We were sacrificed for you," they shouted. "Where is the government, where are the members of parliament? Why they don't join our mourning? It creates a gap between people and the government," said Muhammad, 40 years old, who said one his relatives died in the Kabul blast.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    17 comments

    This is getting disgusting,so many millions brainwashed into a murderous cult. Can we just leave this place it is not fit for civilized people,I am sick of my American people getting caught up in this religous slaughterhouse. Bring my people home Obama!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: afghanistan, terrorism, bomb, blast, attacks, world-news, helmand, eurasia
  • 6
    Dec
    2011
    3:20am, EST

    'Grim new precedent': Dozens die as sectarian violence erupts in Kabul

    A suicide bomber struck a crowd of Shiite worshippers who packed a Kabul, Afghanistan mosque Tuesday. NBC's Atia Abawi reports from Kabul.

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    KABUL, Afghanistan -- A suicide bomber struck a crowd of Shiite worshippers who packed a Kabul mosque Tuesday to mark a holy day, killing at least 56 people, and a second bombing in another city killed four more Shiites. They were the first major sectarian assaults since the fall of the Taliban a decade ago. 

    A Pakistan-based militant group claimed responsibility for the attack.

    The attacker blew himself up in the midst of a crowd of men, women and children. The mosque had been packed with worshippers and many who could not fit inside were outside the building.


    The blast came shortly after a bicycle bomb near a mosque in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif killed at least four people and wounded 21. Another bomb in a motorcycle exploded in the southern city of Kandahar on Tuesday afternoon, injuring six people, but police said that attack did not target Shiites.

    • Slideshow: Nation at a crossroads

    Afghanistan has a history of tension and violence between Sunnis and the Shiite minority, but while such attacks have become commonplace in neighboring Pakistan and parts of the Middle East such as Iraq, they have not occurred in Afghanistan.

    "Afghanistan has been at war for 30 years and terrible things have happened, but one of the things that Afghans have been spared generally has been what appears to be this kind of very targeted sectarian attack," Kate Clark, from the Afghanistan Analysts Network, told Reuters. "We don't know who planted the bomb yet and it is dangerous to jump to conclusions but if it was Taliban, it marks something really serious, and dangerous, and very troubling." 

    Updated at 10:40 a.m. ET: Lashkar-e-Jhangvi al-Alami, a Pakistan-based militant organization, has claimed responsibility for the Kabul suicide attack. In a call to NBC News, someone who claimed to be a spokesman for the group said they had succeeded in their mission to attack Shiites. "It is the first time that someone outside of Afghanistan has claimed responsibility for a attack in the country," NBC News' Mushtaq Yusufzai said.

    Updated at 8:50 a.m. ET:  The Ministry of Interior said 55 were killed in Kabul — including two women and four children. Sayed Kabir Amiri, who is in charge of Kabul hospitals, told the Associated Press that more than 160 were wounded in the blast. Police confirm that a second bomb was defused in Mazar-i-Sharif near the one that blew up.

    Updated at 7:05 a.m. ET: A Taliban spokesman tells Reuters that the group did not carry out the Kabul or Mazar-i-Sharif attacks.

    "People were killed by the enemy's un-Islamic and inhuman activity," Zabihullah Mujahid writes in an emailed statement. He adds that the Taliban "strongly condemns such a cruel, indiscriminate and un-Islamic attack."

    Updated at 6:30 a.m. ET: Gareth Price, a senior research fellow at London-based think tank Chatham House, says the attacks may have come now because Afghan and Western forces aren't the easy targets they once were.

    "Shia shrines are a softer target than foreign troops or the Afghan army," he tells msnbc.com.

    However, discrimination against Shiites --  and in particular the largely Shiite Hazaras --  has deep roots in Afghan history. "All the groups pick on the Hazaras," Price says.

    • PhotoBlog: Worshippers run for their lives following blast

    Updated at 6:25 a.m. ET: Citing an official with Afghanistan's health ministry, NBC News reports that the Kabul shrine blast killed 54 people and injured 150 others.

    Updated at 5:55 a.m. ET: Afghan officials tell The Associated Press that the death toll in Kabul suicide bombing has reached 48. Mohammed Zahir, chief of the Kabul Criminal Investigation Department, adds that more than 100 people were wounded.

    Updated at 5:15 a.m. ET: "The shrine's loudspeaker continued to blast a recitation of the Quran as ambulances carried bodies and wounded away," The Associated Press reports. It adds that the Abul Fazl shrine is located close to the palace where President Hamid Karzai lives. Its blue minaret is one of Kabul's better known landmarks.  

    S. Sabawoon / EPA

    A body is covered at the scene of an attack near a shrine in Kabul, Afghanistan.

    Updated at 4:55 a.m. ET: Britain's Telegraph newspaper reportsthat "Shiites were banned from marking Ashoura in public under the Taliban who ruled Afghanistan until 2001. This year, there are more Ashoura monuments around the city than usual including black shrines and flags."

    Updated at 4:35 a.m. ET: Jonathan Boone (@jon_boone), a Kabul-based correspondent for The Guardian, tweetsquoting US General John Allen as describing the attack as "the latest example of the insurgents' blatant disregard for human life."

    Updated at 4:25 a.m. ET:  Mohammad Bakir Shaikzada, the top Shiite cleric in Kabul, says that Shiites haven't been attacked in decades in Afghanistan. "This is a crime against Muslims during the holy day of Ashoura. We Muslims will never forget these attacks. It is the enemy of the Muslims who are carrying them out," he said. He says he does not know who could have carried out such an attack.

    • Afghanistan allies pledge to stay for the long haul

    Updated at 4:15 a.m. ET: Afghan President Hamid Karzai says it is first time that "terrorism" of this kind has occurred in the country on such a religious day, Reuters reports.

    Updated at 4:10 a.m. ET: Ahmad Shuja (@ahmadshuja), director of Foundation for Afghanistan, tweets: "My hunch: Today's attacks WON'T, per se, touch off chain of sectarian violence. No Shiite group organized enough or duly experienced."

    Updated at 4:00 a.m ET: NBC News cites a health official as saying that at least 50 people were injured in the Kabul blast.

    • How US forces are divvied between wars

    Updated at 3.55 a.m. ET: Mohammad Zahir, head of Kabul's Criminal Investigation Department, tells Reuters that he counted up to 20 bodies at a Kabul hospital, and expected the toll to rise following the explosion at a Shiite shrine in the Afghan capital. A second attack near the main mosque in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif killed four people and injured 17 others.

    Reuters journalists Mirwais Harooni and Emma Graham-Harrison point out that although "Afghanistan has a history of tension and violence between Sunnis and the Shiite minority ... since the fall of the Taliban the country had been spared the large-scale sectarian attacks that have troubled neighboring Pakistan. The noon bomb in a riverside shrine, in the heart of old Kabul, appears to set a grim new precedent."

    Updated at 3:47 a.m. ET: At least 34 people were killed on Tuesday after blasts hit Shiite shrines in Afghanistan during the festival of Ashoura,Al Jazeera English reports citing local media reports and police.

    Published at 3:30 a.m. ET: A blast at a shrine in Afghanistan's capital during the Shiite festival of Ashoura killed up to 24 people Tuesday, according to reports.

    Meanwhile, four others were killed in the northern city of Mazar-i-Sharif when a bomb on bicycle exploded, Reuters said. The victims included a soldier.

    The Kabul explosion was caused by a suicide bomber, Al Jazeera reported. It put the death toll at 24.

    However, Hashmatullah Stanekzai, a spokesman for Kabul police, told the Associated Press that it wasn't clear if the explosives were planted in the shrine or if a suicide bomber was behind the attack.

    The AP reported that at least 15 had been killed in the attack on the shrine, where worshippers were gathering for Ashoura, the Shiite Muslim holiday marking the death of Hussein, the grandson of Prophet Muhammad.

    NBC News, msnbc.com staff, the Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    386 comments

    Barbarians to the core! Religion of peace my a**.

    Show more
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