Times Colonist

At least 132 dead in Pakistan bombing

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ISLAMABAD — At least 132 people were killed and dozens more critically injured Friday, in a bombing at an election campaign rally in a remote region of Pakistan, an attack that hurled the country deep into political chaos.

Officials blamed a suicide bomber for the killings and said the death toll could rise further.

The bombing happened on the day former prime minister Nawaz Sharif made a dramatic return to Pakistan aboard a commercial plane and was immediatel­y taken into custody along with his daughter on corruption charges.

Critics accused the army of failing to provide security after the bomber blew himself up at the election event in southweste­rn Pakistan.

Two of Pakistan’s most popular political figures, Sharif and his daughter Maryam — his political heir — were arrested by anti-corruption police at the airport in the eastern city of Lahore moments after they arrived from London, where Sharif’s wife is in a hospital receiving treatment for lymphoma.

As hundreds of their supporters confronted anti-riot police about a kilometre from the Lahore airport, the Sharifs were flown aboard a small plane to the capital, Islamabad, where a judge ordered them transferre­d to prison.

The Sharifs were sentenced last week for failing to disclose the assets the family used to purchase four London apartments, whose ownership was revealed in the leaked Panama Papers in 2016. Sharif, who was ordered to serve 10 years in prison, vowed to return to Pakistan to appeal the verdict.

The disclosure of the apartments at London’s posh Avenfield House prompted a furor that led to Sharif’s removal from office last year. Sharif’s party — the Pakistan Muslim LeagueNawa­z — has described the case against him as politicall­y motivated, arguing that the country’s powerful military establishm­ent is using the pliable courts to punish him for challengin­g its supremacy while in office.

In a video statement recorded aboard their Etihad Airways flight before it took off from Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, Sharif said he knew he would be arrested but cast himself as a defender of democracy.

“I am making this sacrifice for the future of Pakistan,” he said.

“Please support me. Let’s change the fate of our country.”

Most of the major roads leading to Lahore were sealed on Friday ahead of the Sharifs’ arrival, while thousands of police officers and army rangers deployed to keep a lid on unrest. Authoritie­s reportedly took several hundred party activists into custody late Thursday.

Still, about 1,000 stonethrow­ing protesters marched to within about half a mile of the Lahore airport, where police fired tear gas canisters to disperse them. Dozens of police officers and demonstrat­ors suffered minor injuries, authoritie­s said.

Sharif supporters accuse the military establishm­ent of attempting to tilt the playing field to ensure his party does not return to power in July 25 elections. In recent weeks, media outlets critical of army interferen­ce in politics have faced a clampdown, and several candidates from Sharif’s party have suddenly defected in pivotal Punjab province, which includes Lahore.

Earlier Friday, a group of Pakistani and internatio­nal academics issued a statement condemning intimidati­on and harassment of Sharif’s supporters, saying that the crackdown threatened the country’s ability to hold free and fair elections.

 ??  ?? Pakistani volunteers rush injured people to a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, on Friday after two bombs exploded, killing many people in the latest election-related violence to hit Pakistan.
Pakistani volunteers rush injured people to a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, on Friday after two bombs exploded, killing many people in the latest election-related violence to hit Pakistan.

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