The Borneo Post

Pakistan suicide attack kills 18 people amid fears of more attacks

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QUETTA, Pakistan: A suicide bomber blew himself up outside a Sufi shrine in southwest Pakistan killing 18 people, officials said, in an attack claimed by the Islamic State group.

The attack follows a deadly bomb blast at the same shrine in the oil and gas rich Balochista­n province in 2005, which killed 35 people.

“A suicide bomber blew himself up after he was intercepte­d by police guards on duty outside the shrine, killing 18 people including three children under the age of 12 and two policemen, and wounding at least 27 others, 14 of them seriously,” provincial home secretary Akbar Harifal told AFP.

Provincial home minister Sarfaraz Bugti confirmed the toll. The blast occurred as Muslims attended annual celebratio­ns of a local saint. Members of Sunni and Shiite sects make daily visits to the shrine in Jhal Magsi district but attendance climbs significan­tly during festivitie­s.

The explosion triggered panic, with worshipper­s shouting and running in different directions, officials at the site told AFP.

“The suicide bomber struck outside the shrine at a time when it was packed with people attending anniversar­y celebratio­ns of Syed Cheesal Shah,” said senior local administra­tion official Asad Kakar, referring to the local saint.

Harifal said the seriously injured patients were being airlifted to southern Sindh province in the absence of adequate medical facilities in restive Balochista­n.

The Islamic State Khorasan Province – the Middle Eastern group’s affiliate in Afghanista­n and Pakistan – has since released a statement claiming the attack, according to the US- based monitoring group SITE.

Officials said the incident came amid a new terror threat from four foreign agencies hostile to Pakistan.

“I can tell you that four hostile agencies are planning a major terror attack in Pakistan to undo our gains in the fight against terrorism,” military spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor told a press briefing.

Pakistan has launched a series of military offensives since 2007 in its tribal badlands near the Afghan border to cleanse these areas of homegrown as well as Taliban and al- Qaeda-linked militants.

Ghafoor did not disclose the names of the foreign agencies or their origin but added that ‘ no organised infrastruc­ture of any terrorist outfit exists anywhere in Pakistan now’.

Balochista­n is afflicted by Islamist militancy, sectarian violence and a separatist insurgency. Sectarian violence – in particular by Sunni hardliners against Shiites who make up roughly 20 per cent of Pakistan’s 200 million people – has claimed thousands of lives in the country over the past decade. — AFP

 ??  ?? Massum receives the body of Talabani at Sulaimaniy­a Airport, Iraq. — Reuters photo
Massum receives the body of Talabani at Sulaimaniy­a Airport, Iraq. — Reuters photo

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