The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Taliban strikes Pak court, 7 dead

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

SEVEN PERSONS, including a lawyer, were killed and 21 others injured on Tuesday when a group of heavily-armed Taliban suicide bombers stormed a court in Pakistan’s volatile Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, the latest in a wave of terror attacks in the country.

The attackers opened fire and threw grenades as they attempted to enter the sessions court premises in Tangi, some 30 km away from the provincial capital Peshawar, prompting retaliator­y fire by the security forces deployed there.

Jamaat-ul-ahrar (JUA), a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibi­lity for the attack later on Tuesday.

“Several terrorists attacked the court and resorted to heavy firing at the main gate of the lower court,” Sohail Khalid, district police chief, said.

“Bomb disposal experts said that each bomber was wearing seven to eight kilogramme­s of explosives,” he told reporters.

One bomber was killed in the firing at the gate and the second was killed as he entered the court. The third bomber died when he detonated his explosives, officials said.

“Seven people were killed and 20 others were injured during the attack,” Sohail Khalid, police chief Charsadda, said.

Provincial government sources said one lawyer is among the seven persons killed.

Khalid said due to tight security the bombers could not enter the court, but had they been successful in entering the premises it “would have been a catastroph­e”.

Director General Interservi­ces Public Relations, Major General Asif Ghafoor tweeted, “Chief of Army Staff lauds security forces’ response to Charsada blast. First-tier police response has saved many lives. Shares grief on loss of lives.”

A search and rescue operation was underway, he added.

District hospitals have been put on high alert.

Charsadda has been a target of terror attacks for nearly a decade.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif condemned the attack in a statement issued by his office. “We are a steadfast nation and will not be deterred by such attacks. Our government will continue to fight against terrorists and we will succeed,” the statement said.

The latest attack came as security has been tightened across Pakistan after a recent wave of terrorist strikes killed more than 100 people.

On Thursday, a suicide bomber killed 88 people at a famed Sufi shrine in Sindh province. Following the attack, the army launched an offesive against militants and claimed to have killed more than 130 terrorists across the country.

In August last year, more than 70 people, mostly lawyers were killed in a bombing of a hospital in the city of Quetta.

 ?? AP ?? The site of the crash at Essendon Airport in Melbourne.
AP The site of the crash at Essendon Airport in Melbourne.

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