Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Pakistanis mourn after election rally bombing kills 128

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QUETTA, July 14 ( AFP) - Mourners gathered Saturday to bury their dead in southwest Pakistan after a blast killed 128 people at a political rally in one of the country's deadliest attacks, underscori­ng ongoing security challenges following years of dramatic improvemen­ts.

The Islamic State- claimed suicide attack in the town of Mastung, near the Balochista­n provincial capital Quetta, was the latest in a series of bombings targeting campaign events in the last week, sparking fears of more violence ahead of nationwide polls on July 25.

Hospitals in the area have been placed under “emergency” management after being overwhelme­d yesterday, with around 150 also injured in the blast -- many of them still in critical condition after suffering head trauma.

“We have imposed emergency in the hospitals and cancelled the vacations of the doctors and paramedics, ” Balochista­n home minister Agha Umar Bungalzai told AFP.

The provincial home secretary Haider Shako added that extra security forces had been deployed in “sensitive areas” and warned politician­s to remain “vigilant”.

Among the dead was Siraj Raisani, who was running for a provincial seat with the newly- formed local Balochista­n Awami Party (BAP).

The BAP suspended campaign- related events on Saturday and has called for its supporters to observe three days of mourning.

The attack was the deadliest since Taliban militants assaulted a school in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar in 2014, killing over 150 people, mostly children, and one of the deadliest in Pakistan's long struggle with militancy.

The explosion in Mastung came hours after four people were killed and 39 injured when a bomb hidden inside a motorcycle detonated close to another politician's convoy in Bannu, near the border with Afghanista­n.

The politician -- Akram Khan Durrani, a candidate of the Muttahida Majlis- e- Amal (MMA) party -- survived.

No group has yet claimed responsibi­lity for that attack.

And on Tuesday, a bomb claimed by the Pakistani Taliban targeted a rally by the Awami National Party ( ANP) in the city of Peshawar. Local ANP leader Haroon Bilour was among the 22 killed.

Following the attacks, analysts called for the country's armed forces to focus on securi- ty challenges rather than politics, in the wake of myriad allegation­s that the military was meddling in the country's upcoming polls.

“It has never been more true that Pakistan's security establishm­ent needs to focus on security, not politics,” tweeted analyst Mosharraf Zaidi.

In an editorial in the English daily Dawn, the newspaper called for authoritie­s to “not only beef up security but also mobilise the entire intelligen­ce apparatus to do the job they are actually meant to, ie preventing attacks”.

The bombings come at a moment of increasing political turmoil in Pakistan as former prime minister Nawaz Sharif was arrested after arriving in the eastern city of Lahore late Friday, as he aims to energise his embattled party's base -injecting fresh uncertaint­y into the country days ahead of the polls.

 ??  ?? Pakistani men mourn the death of a relative after a bomb blast at an election rally, at a hospital in Quetta on July 13, 2018. A bomb killed at least 25 people and injured more than 30 on July 13 in southweste­rn Pakistan, in the day's second attack on...
Pakistani men mourn the death of a relative after a bomb blast at an election rally, at a hospital in Quetta on July 13, 2018. A bomb killed at least 25 people and injured more than 30 on July 13 in southweste­rn Pakistan, in the day's second attack on...

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