Hundreds of schools in Pakistan closed after militant threats

Islamabad, Pakistan - More than 100 girls' schools were closed down in northwest Pakistan Monday following the murder of a female teacher by suspected pro-Taliban militants in the tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, media reports said.

The teacher was shot dead Saturday in the Mohmand Agency in what appeared to be the fulfilment of threats of reprisals by Islamic extremists if teachers did not start wearing head-to-toe veils, the Dawn news channel reported.

Female teachers responded by closing down all the girls' schools in the in agency.

Sympathisers of Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan have recently targeted several women's educational institutions in the tribal areas and surrounding North-West Frontier Province (NWFP).

Buildings of two adjacent girls' schools were damaged by a powerful blast in the Swat district of NWFP Saturday night.

A missionary institution for women in the same area was shut for a week in September after it received threats from an Islamic extremist organization accusing the administration of propagating Christianity and obscenity.

Education officials in Swat made wearing of the burqa obligatory for all female students last week after several schools received threatening letters from the same organization.

The frontier province has suffered this year from creeping radicalisation as militants seeking to impose Taliban-style laws and customs began to extend their influence from the mountains into the plain areas.

Music shops, internet cafes and barbers' shops are regular targets for the militants, who also killed over 300 people, including more than 100 security personnel, in retaliatory attacks for the army operation against Islamabad's Red Mosque in July.

Sixteen people were killed and more than 30 injured on Monday when a burka-clad suicide bomber detonated a powerful bomb during a security check in the NWFP town of Bannu.