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Injured Pakistani soldiers stand in the path of Afghan Taliban at a checkpoint in Chaman district of Paktia province
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Pakistani soldiers walk past a wounded female soldier on the road of Jalalabad
Injured and displaced people on Monday gather at a government-run hospital in Chaman district of Paktia
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Numerous Pakistani soldiers were wounded during the attack by four suicide bombers in Peshawar's Maidan-e-Shariah stadium on Thursday night, a military spokesman said.
Army officials initially said a suicide bomber was carrying explosives when he detonated a suicide belt.
The Taliban claimed responsibility for the bombing.
In a statement, spokesman Zafarullah Mujahid said: "We had no choice but to kill our leaders because they had given the wrong information."
But he added that the blast had killed only six army personnel and injured over 50 others.
'A large number of Taliban' killed and wounded in attack in Peshawar
In a statement released by the military, it said: "The military team of the Intelligence, Military Security and Peshawar Police was conducting a security perimeter in the area of Maidan-e-Shariah stadium when the terrorists attacked our team in order to gain the upper hand and killed a number of our people."
The attack struck in the vicinity of Maidan-e-Shariah stadium, a national football stadium on the outskirts of Peshawar. It damaged dozens of nearby buildings.
Tribal leader Dr Saeed Rizvi, speaking from his personal car at the site of the attack, said that the blast had killed "about 200 policemen," and that hundreds of people had been wounded.
A woman, wearing a headscarf, stands next to the charred wreckage of her car as she waits for the ambulance to arrive
Pakistani soldiers stand in the path of Afghan Taliban at a checkpoint in Chaman district of Paktia province, December 30, 2012.
"We have been waiting for hours to find out who was responsible, but still no one has come forward," he said.
He said he was on his way back to the village when his car was surrounded by Taliban snipers
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Unemployment rate rises unexpectedly — and to record highs— after the recession. This is true not just in California but in the whole state and region. The unemployment rate was 16.1 percent in October 2003, but it has risen to 16.3 percent in October 2015.
The graph above shows the jobless rate in California compared to the population. In October 2014, it was 21.5 percent; in October 2015 it was 21.1 percent. In October 2014, there were approximately 22.5 million Californians in the labor force and in the labor force participation rate, which shows that half of the labor force is unemployed (which has not always been the case in the United States).
The unemployment rate is not the only measure of the nation's joblessness rate, but the jobless rate — which doesn't include long-term unenrolled youth — shows that about 26 million young adults are in the labor force and in the labor force participation rate. That's a 14-percentage-point increase in the number of jobs since late 2010 — which is a lot of jobs.
In addition, there is the labor force participation rate — the share of the labor force aged 15-64 — which shows that employment hasn't risen much in the United States. There are 2.5 million fewer full-time U.S. workers than there were when President Barack Obama took office in January 2009. The employment-population ratio, a measure of the number of people in each job, has remained roughly constant since 2006.
Here are the jobs in the United States:
There are 1.9 million jobs in manufacturing.