PESHAWAR, Pakistan | A car bomb devastated a busy street in this northwestern Pakistani city on Friday, killing 20 people, injuring scores more and unnerving a region already dangerously on edge following the attacks on India’s commercial capital.
Adding to the tension, a suspected U.S. missile strike reportedly killed three people in a stronghold of the Taliban and al Qaeda near the border with Afghanistan.
Escalating violence is destabilizing Pakistan’s northwest just as the country faces accusations from archrival India that the gunmen behind the carnage in Mumbai last week were trained in Pakistan and steered by militants based there.
Neither the motive nor the culprits behind the Friday evening blast in Peshawar were clear. But provincial government chief Haider Khan Hoti said “external forces” could be to blame — a comment understood in Pakistan to mean India.
The bomb went off near Peshawar’s famed Storytellers Bazaar early Friday evening, wrecking a Shi’ite Muslim mosque and a hotel and setting a string of vehicles and shops ablaze.
Mohammed Bilal, a 28-year-old goldsmith being treated at a city hospital for a gash on his face, said he saw a white van explode in the street as he was walking home.
Khizer Hayat, a senior doctor at the city’s main hospital, said 20 bodies as well as more than 60 wounded people were brought there.
Police chief Malik Naveed Khan said the bomb seemed to contain chemicals designed to spread fire.
Pakistan and the United States have stepped up operations against Taliban and al Qaeda strongholds in the northwest to curb mounting attacks launched from there on targets in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
There have been more than 30 suspected U.S. missile strikes since August, including one on Friday in the North Waziristan region, part of Pakistan’s wild tribal belt viewed as a possible hiding place for Osama bin Laden.
Three Pakistani intelligence officials said one missile hit a house in the village of Khushali Turikhel and another landed in a field.
The officials, who cited reports from agents and informants in the area, said three people were killed and two others injured. The identity of the victims was not known. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to speak to the news media.
The missiles are apparently fired from drone aircraft that take off from Afghanistan. U.S. officials rarely confirm or deny responsibility.
Insurgents have responded with an onslaught of gun and bomb attacks that have sparked concern about the possible disruption of a key supply line for NATO and U.S. troops that cuts through Peshawar and the Khyber Pass into Afghanistan.
Earlier Friday, a suicide car bomber killed six people at a checkpoint in the Orakzai tribal region, just south of Peshawar. In the nearby town of Bannu, police said militants armed with guns and rockets killed two officers manning another checkpoint.
Please read our comment policy before commenting.