Originally published February 10, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified February 10, 2008 at 12:19 AM
Blast kills 27 at Pakistan rally
A suspected suicide bomber killed at least 27 people and wounded 40 at an opposition rally Saturday in insurgency-racked northwest Pakistan...
McClatchy Newspapers
WALLY SANTANA / AP
A Pakistani lawyer is pelted by water cannon bursts Saturday as he and others try to visit the home of deposed Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, under house arrest in Islamabad. Protesters were demanding President Pervez Musharraf's resignation and Chaudhry's reinstatement.

Asif Ali Zardari, widower of slain opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, addressed supporters.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A suspected suicide bomber killed at least 27 people and wounded 40 at an opposition rally Saturday in insurgency-racked northwest Pakistan as police in Islamabad clashed with hundreds of lawyers and other protesters demanding the resignation of President Pervez Musharraf.
The husband of slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, meanwhile, kicked off the opposition Pakistan People's Party campaign for Feb. 18 national elections with a speech to some 100,000 jubilant supporters.
"She is alive, Bibi, she is alive," declared Asif Ali Zardari, using the nickname of his late wife, who died in a gun and suicide-bomb attack on Dec. 27. "Her whole life was for you. My whole life is for you. My children's lives are for you."
It was by far the largest gathering of what has been a lackluster campaign, where fear of terror attacks has held back both candidates and crowds.
Saturday's violence bore out fears that political turmoil is likely to worsen in the run-up to the polls. Musharraf's government responded by promising to step up security for candidates.
Amid the latest unrest, Adm. Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, met with Musharraf and top Pakistani military leaders to discuss a possible expansion of limited U.S. counter-insurgency training of Pakistani security forces.
Mullen is the latest of a string of U.S. military and intelligence officials to visit Pakistan in recent weeks, a sign of the alarm within the Bush administration over the expanding insurgency by al-Qaida-allied Islamic groups based in the tribal region bordering Afghanistan.
"Certainly the threat is going up," said Mullen. "There is training potential that we can offer [to Pakistani security forces], and if we're asked to do that, we can," he said.
Pakistan has been hit by a surge in attacks on security forces and suicide bombings since Musharraf ordered an assault last summer on an Islamabad mosque held by radical Islamic students in which dozens of people died.
The bombing Saturday occurred in Charsadda, about 25 miles from the North West Frontier Province capital of Peshawar, ripping through a rally of hundreds of supporters of the Awami National Party. At least 27 people died and 40 were injured, said NWFP Special Home Secretary Teepu Khan, a senior security official.
The ANP is a regional secular party representing Pashtuns, the ethnic group that inhabits the Pakistan-Afghanistan border region. Pashtuns also dominate the Afghan Taliban and the recently formed Taliban Movement of Pakistan, whose leader has been accused of plotting Bhutto's slaying.
The clashes in central Islamabad erupted when police moved to disperse a protest by some 500 lawyers, political activists and students demanding Musharraf's resignation and the reinstatement of fired Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry.
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The protesters planned to march to Chaudhry's home, where he and his family have been under house arrest since Musharraf sacked him and dozens of other jurists in November.
Witnesses said police suddenly opened fire with tear gas and water cannons, igniting clashes with the protesters.
The protest was called as part of a national movement for the reinstatement of Chaudhry and the other judges led by lawyers who are boycotting courts across the country of 165 million.
The purge of the judges was seen as a bid by Musharraf, who seized power in a 1999 coup, to pre-empt challenges to constitutional changes he enacted to extend his presidential term while remaining army chief, a post he resigned in December.
Zardari addressed the rally in Thatta, a historic town in the PPP's stronghold of southern Sindh province, about 60 miles from the country's financial capital of Karachi.
The crowd's size and enthusiasm seemed to vindicate Zardari's controversial assumption of the leadership of the party that Bhutto took over from her father, former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. He was ousted in a 1977 coup and executed two years later.
The reception could fuel any ambition Zardari harbors for the prime ministership, analysts said.
Earlier this week, Zardari completed 40 days of mourning, during which he kept himself largely in seclusion, as is traditional in Islam.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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