Arab Times

Pakistan attacks kill 85

US special envoy quits

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan, June 24, (Agencies): The death toll from twin blasts in the northweste­rn town of Parachinar climbed to 67 overnight, bringing the overall death toll from three separate attacks in Pakistan on Friday to 85, with several others in critical condition, officials said.

Shahid Khan, a government official in Parachinar, confirmed the toll Saturday, saying residents who had been preparing to celebrate the end of Ramadan were now in mourning. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a Sunni extremist group, claimed the twin bombings at a crowded market in the Shiite-dominated town, linking them to sectarian fighting in Syria.

Dr Sabir Hussain, an official at a government-run hospital in Parachinar, said they had received 261 victims of the twin blasts, with 62 listed in critical condition.

Another 14 people were killed Friday in a suicide car bombing near the office of the provincial police chief in the southweste­rn city of Quetta, police spokesman Shahzada Farhat said. That attack was claimed by a breakaway Taleban faction and the Islamic State group. Gunmen in the port city of Karachi attacked police officers at a roadside restaurant, killing four of them before fleeing, senior police officer Asif Ahmed said.

Maj Gen Asif Ghafoor, a military spokesman, linked the attacks to alleged militant sanctuarie­s in neighborin­g Afghanista­n and promised greater border security. The two countries often accuse each other of turning a blind eye to militants.

Security forces raided a militant hideout in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar before dawn Saturday, triggering a shootout in which three Pakistani Taliban were killed and two police officers were wounded, senior police official Sajjad Khan said. He said the militants were making bombs that likely would have been used to target holiday festivitie­s.

Khan said the identity of the slain militants was not immediatel­y known. But intelligen­ce officials said one of the men has been identified as a wanted militant commander linked to the IS group. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the informatio­n.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif condemned the attacks, which came just days before Eid-al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday that marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.

Washington’s special envoy to Afghanista­n and Pakistan stepped down on Friday, just as the United States is preparing to send thousands more troops to the region.

A senior State Department official told AFP that acting special representa­tive Laurel Miller left the post without a replacemen­t being named.

State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert said Miller is returning to a position at the Rand Corporatio­n and that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has not yet decided what to do with post.

The office was created when US officials decided that the conflicts in Afghanista­n and Pakistan are inextricab­ly linked and ought to be dealt with together.

President Donald Trump came to office planning to slash diplomatic spending and Tillerson plans to cut several special envoy roles.

A police officer was beaten to death by an angry mob outside a mosque in Indian-administer­ed Kashmir, police said Friday, as tensions in the volatile disputed region ran high.

Witnesses said the mob attacked Mohammad Ayub Pandith late Thursday after he fired his pistol when confronted by worshipper­s at the mosque in the main city of Srinagar who suspected him of being a government spy.

Violence between government forces and civilians has spiked in recent months in the Himalayan region, where many oppose Indian rule.

A police statement said Pandith, a deputy superinten­dent with the security wing of the state police, had been “attacked and beaten to death by a mob”.

Sri Lankan doctors ended a threeday strike following talks with the government, their profession­al associatio­n said Saturday, ending a crisis that had reportedly left tens of thousands of patients at state-run hospitals stranded.

The Government Medical Officers Associatio­n (GMOA), the island’s biggest trade union of doctors, had stopped work on Thursday to demand the government close down a private medical college establishe­d in 2008, protesting its allegedly poor standards of education.

The shutdown left tens of thousands of mostly poor people who seek free medical care at state-run hospitals unable to access treatment until the GMOA called off the strike on Saturday afternoon following talks with President Maithripal­a Sirisena.

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