FC links Quetta 'bomb-making factory' to attacks on troops, Shias

FC found wires, detonators, mixers to turn the chemicals into bombs during a raid in Quetta.

Paramilitary soldiers stand near bomb-making material which was seized by security forces in Quetta August 21, 2013. PHOTO: REUTERS

QUETTA:
Frontier Corps (FC) said Wednesday that a car bomb factory where troops confiscated more than 100 tones of chemicals had been used in recent attacks on troops and the Shia community.

Paramilitary troops found wires, detonators and mixers to turn the chemicals into bombs during Tuesday's raid in Quetta.

Eleven people have now been arrested in connection with the case and the owner of the compound has been detained for questioning, said a spokesman for FC.


Suspects told investigators that potassium chlorate and ammonium chlorate had been packed with wires and detonators into vehicles at the compound, a paramilitary official said.

Experts believe the compound was effectively a bomb-making factory, which had prepared explosives used in recent bomb attacks on military targets and Shias.

"We have recovered a machine which is basically a mixer, used to mix chemicals to make bombs. We have recovered sulphur and hundreds metre of wire," said the FC spokesman.

"We have also recovered 79 remote controls and short circuit wires. Some 20,000 kilograms of explosive were ready at the factory and just needed to be fitted into vehicles," he added.
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