The Pak Banker

Death toll from Peshawar mosque attack rises to 100

- PESHAWAR

The death toll from the suicide attack on a mosque in Peshawar's Police Lines area a day earlier rose to 100 on Tuesday after more bodies were recovered from the attack site.

Lady Reading Hospital (LRH) spokespers­on Mohammad Asim said that 100 dead bodies had been brought to the medical facility.

In a statement, he said 53 injured citizens were currently being treated while seven had been admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). He said that most of the injured were out of danger, adding that all the injured were being provided medical facilities free-of-cost.

On Monday, 59 people, mostly police officials, were martyred and over 150 were injured after an explosion ripped through a mosque in Peshawar's Red Zone area. The powerful blast blew away the wall of the prayer hall and an inner roof.

The outlawed Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibi­lity for the attack. It later distanced itself from it but sources earlier indicated that it might have been the handiwork of some local faction of the outlawed group.

Peshawar Division Commission­er Riaz Mehsud said that the rescue and search operation at the blast site has been completed, after almost 24 hours.

Earlier, Rescue 1122 spokespers­on Bilal Faizi had said that rescue teams were removing the last part of the collapsed roof of the mosque. "But we are not hopeful of reaching any survivors." On the other hand, Peshawar police chief Muhammad Ijaz Khan said that more than 90 per cent of the victims were policemen, between 300 and 400 of whom had gathered in the compound's mosque for prayers.

Wajahat Ali, a 23-year-old police constable who survived, said that he had lost all hopes for survival. "I remained trapped under the rubble with a dead body over me for seven hours," he told AFP from the LRH. Police say it was a 'suicide bomber', constitute JIT to probe attack

In a media briefing at the Police Lines on Tuesday afternoon, KP Inspector General (IG) Mauzzam Jah Ansari said that the most pertinent question at the moment was how a "suicide bomber" was able to enter Police Lines and go to the mosque.

He said that there was no "central command" at the Police Lines and the checking mechanism was limited to the gate.

"There are canteens present, some constructi­on work was also ongoing. Somehow [explosive] material was brought here in small quantities over a period of time."

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