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Link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13111948
In early April a suicide blast ripped though a Pakistani shrine packed with thousands of devotees, leaving scores dead. Both attackers were schoolboys in their early teens. But one survived and told the BBC's Aleem Maqbool what made him want to take his life and the lives of others.
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"I know my mother and my younger sisters, in North Waziristan, would know what's happened and they must be very upset. I just want to apologise to my mother. But at the time I detonated myself, thoughts of my family were not in my mind, I was only thinking about what the Taliban had taught me."
The attack could still cost Umar his life, he remains seriously ill.
He is also now scared that the Taliban could come to kill him at any time for failing in his suicide mission.
Oh. NOW that there is no guarantee of going to heaven by killing someone else, he's scared.
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