China Daily

Pakistan reeling after IS attack on shrine kills 88

At least 20 children among the victims of ‘well-planned’ bombing in Sehwan

- In Sehwan, Pakistan

Pakistan launched a nationwide security crackdown on Friday after a bomb ripped through a crowded Sufi shrine, killing 88 people and leaving hundreds wounded.

Police cordoned off the shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, a 13th century Muslim saint, as forensic investigat­ors reached the town of Sehwan in Sindh province, some 200 kilometers northeast of financial hub Karachi.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and army chief Qamar Javed Bajwa visited hospitaliz­ed victims and wished them a speedy recovery.

Sharif also directed hospital authoritie­s to provide the best possible treatment to the injured.

The shrine’s centuries-old white floor was still smeared with blood, along with scattered debris including shoes, shawls, and baby bottles.

At least 20 children are believed to be among the dead, said Moeen Uddin Siddiqui, head of local medical facility.

At3:30am,theshrine’scaretaker­stoodamong­thecarnage and defiantly rang its bell, a daily ritual that he vowed to continue, saying he “will not bow down to terrorists”.

The Islamic State group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, which came after a series of bloody extremist assaults this week, including a powerful Taliban suicide bomb in the eastern city of Lahore that killed 13 people.

The attacks have dented growing optimism in security after Pakistan’s decade-long war on militancy.

Military spokesman Asif Ghafoor said the “wellplanne­d attacks” were carried out from sanctuarie­s in Afghanista­n, and Kabul has been asked to take action.

He also said the military had closed the border between the two countries, where Kabul and Islamabad have long accused each other of harboring extremists.

“Scoresofsu­spectshave­been arrested in different cities in a pre-dawn crackdown,” a government official said.

Security officials said at least 37 terrorists had been killed in the country’s northwest in recent days.

Three days of mourning

The Sindh provincial government announced three days of mourning as Pakistanis vented their grief and fury on social media.

“Sunnis, Shias, Hindus, ppl from all faiths visit Sehwan often to pay homage to the great saint. This is an attack on our identity & culture,” said Twitter user Zahraa Saifullah.

Sufism, a mystic Islamic order that believes in living saints, worships through music and is viewed as heretical by some hardline groups.

The Sunni jihadist IS group has targeted Sufi shrines in Pakistan previously, killing more than 50 at a shrine in Balochista­n province last year.

Critics have long argued the military and government crackdown does not address the root causes of extremism, and groups such as the Taliban and the Islamic State group can still carry out spectacula­r attacks.

 ?? SIF HASSAN / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Mourners gather outside the closed gate of a shrine in Sehwan, Pakistan, after a terrorist bombing left 88 dead and hundreds wounded.
SIF HASSAN / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Mourners gather outside the closed gate of a shrine in Sehwan, Pakistan, after a terrorist bombing left 88 dead and hundreds wounded.

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