Bomb kills 40 in Pakistan mosque as Holbrooke visits

ISLAMABAD, (Reuters) – A suicide bomber killed  around 40 people at a mosque in northwest Pakistan yesterday,  as U.S. special envoy Richard Holbrooke consulted the country’s  leaders on what needs to be done once the army eliminates the  Taliban in Swat valley.

“The death toll is 40. We have no idea as yet how many have  been wounded,” said Atif-ur-Rehman, the senior-most government  administrator in the Upper Dir district, close to Swat Valley,  where the army has been conducting a major offensive against  the Taliban.

Umer Rehman, a resident of Hayagai village, around 200 km  (125 miles) northwest of Islamabad, said the bomber struck as  worshippers poured out of the mosque after Friday prayers. He  said 12 of the 38 bodies identified by police were children.

Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani said such incidents would  not “deter the government from its resolve to eliminate this  scourge (of terrorism) from the country”.