The Borneo Post

Pakistan bomb blast at fruit market kills 20

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I was loading a small truck and I heard a huge bang and it seemed as if the earth beneath me had shaken and I fell down.

QUETTA, Pakistan: At least 20 people were killed and 48 wounded Friday by a powerful suicide blast apparently targeting the Shia Hazara ethnic minority at a crowded fruit market in Pakistan’s Quetta city, officials said.

Body parts littered the scene and injured people screamed for help as black smoke cloaked the market after the explosion.

A faction of the Pakistani Taliban claimed the attack, which occurred in the capital of southweste­rn Balochista­n province.

The group said it collaborat­ed with Lashkar- e- Jhangvi ( LeJ), which has been behind numerous bloody attacks on Shiite Muslims in Pakistan. There was no immediate confi rmation from LeJ.

Balochista­n — which borders Afghanista­n and Iran — is Pakistan’s largest and poorest province, rife with ethnic, sectarian and separatist insurgenci­es.

Balochista­n home minister Zia Ullah Langu gave the toll and confi rmed it was a suicide blast, adding that two of the dead were children.

Provincial police chief Mohsin

Irfan Khan, a labourer

Butt said eight Hazara were among the victims.

The Hazara, whose Central Asian features make them easily recognisab­le, are a soft target for Sunni militants, who consider them heretics.

They are so frequently targeted that they are forced to live in two protected enclaves in the city and are given a daily police escort to the market to stock up on supplies.

Police chief Butt said this had happened Friday.

The bomb detonated near a site where produce was being loaded for distributi­on around the market.

“I was loading a small truck and I heard a huge bang and it seemed as if the earth beneath me had shaken and I fell down,” said Irfan Khan, a labourer, from his hospital bed.

“The atmosphere was filled with black smoke and I could not see anything, I could hear people screaming for help and I was also screaming for help.”

He said the air was‘ filled with the stinging smell of burnt human flesh’.

Senior police official Abdul Razaq Cheema said the blast targeted the Hazarganji neighbourh­ood of Quetta.

Hazara make up roughly 500,000 of the city’s 2.3 million people.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said the blast was a ‘painful reminder’ of the many attacks suffered by the Hazara community in Quetta over the years, and called for the government of Prime Minister Imran Khan to give them better protection.

“Each time, there are promises that more will be done to protect them, and each time those promises have failed to materialis­e,” wrote Omar Waraich, Amnesty’s deputy director for South Asia.

Violence in Pakistan has dropped significan­tly since the country’s deadliest- ever militant attack, an assault on a school in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar in 2014 that killed more than 150 people, most of them children.

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 ??  ?? Pakistani security officials inspect the site of a bomb blast at a fruit market in Quetta. — AFP photo
Pakistani security officials inspect the site of a bomb blast at a fruit market in Quetta. — AFP photo

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