Khaleej Times

Taleban suicide blasTs kill 61 in lahore, kabul

10 cops among 26 dead in Pakistan market attack

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lahore — An explosion claimed by the Pakistani Taleban killed at least 26 people and injured dozens in a busy vegetable market in the Pakistani city of Lahore on Monday, officials said.

The powerful blast hit a bustling main road in the south of Lahore and blew out windows in nearby buildings.

“A suicide bomber of Tehreek-eTaliban Pakistan (TTP) used a motorcycle bomb to kill dozens of policemen,” TTP spokesman Muhammad Khurasani said in a statement e-mailed to local media.

“Our message to frontline allies of enemies of Islam is to get out of our way or be ready to suffer this fate,” Khurasani added.

Initial police investigat­ions suggested it might be a suicide bomb attack.

“Apparently, according to our initial findings, he was a suicide bomber, who used a motorcycle,” deputy chief of police operations for Lahore, Haider Ashraf, told reporters, adding that at least 10 police officers were among the dead.

City commission­er Abdullah Khan Sumbul said the blast targeted police.

Senior local administra­tion official Sumair Ahmad Syed put the new toll at 26 dead with over 50 injured. District emergency officer Ahmad Raza confirmed the death toll, though he put the number of injured at 63.

The area was busy with police at the time because officers had been sent to the market to clear stalls that had illegally spilt onto the road. —

lahore — A suicide bomber struck near a police team in the eastern city of Lahore on Monday killing at least 26 and wounding another 54, many of them police officers, an official said.

Senior police officer Haider Ashraf said a suicide bomber on a motorcycle struck near police guarding a demolition site at Kot Lakhpat’s vegetable market on the outskirts of Lahore.

Ashraf said it was believed earlier that the bomb was in a car, but it was later discovered that the vehicle belonged to a police officer, among the eight officers killed.

He said many of 35 wounded are policemen and several bystanders were wounded by the impact of the powerful blast. Ashraf added that near the blast site a high rise building houses important informatio­n technology offices but the apparent target was the police gathering.

The outlawed militant group Tehrik-e-Taleban claimed responsibi­lity for the attack, confirming they used a suicide bomber on a motorcycle. The city’s commission­er Abdullah Khan Sumbul said the blast targeted police.

A spokesman for Lahore police, Syed Hammad Shah, put the toll at 25 dead with 40 injured. Senior local administra­tion official Sumair Ahmad Syed confirmed the death toll, though he put the number of injured at 35.

Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan told a Press conference held minutes after the blast that most of the casualties were police officers, but was unable to confirm the nature of the explosion.

The area was busy with police at the time because officers had been sent to the market to clear stalls that had illegally spilt onto the road.

Provincial law minister Rana Sanaullah said the blast had appeared to target the vegetable market, which was crowded with shoppers.

Eyewitness Sher Dil, who works at an office close to the site of the explosion, said it blew out the windows of his office building.

“I was in my office when it all happened. It was a deafening blast, which shook the entire Arfa Karim Towers,” Sher Dil said.

Pakistan’s president, prime minister and army chief all issued statements expressing condolence­s for the loss of life.

Lahore has been hit by significan­t militant attacks in Pakistan’s more than decade-long war on extremism, but they have been less frequent in recent years.

The last major blast in the city was in March last year, when 75 were killed and hundreds injured in a bomb targeting Christians celebratin­g Easter Sunday in a park. But the country was hit by a wave of attacks in February this year, including a bomb that killed 14 people in Lahore.

In April a further seven were killed in an attack in the city targeting a team that was carrying out the country’s long overdue census.

After years of spiralling insecurity, the powerful army launched a crackdown on militancy in the wake of a brutal attack on a school

I was in my office when it all happened. It was a deafening blast, which shook the entire arfa Karim Towers Sher Dil, an eyewitness

in late 2014. More than 150 people, most of them children, died in the Taleban-led assault in Peshawar — the country’s deadliest ever single attack.

It shook a country already grimly accustomed to atrocities and prompted the military to step up an operation in the tribal areas, where militants had previously operated with impunity.

Explosions caused by gas cylinders — which are used for cooking as well as in cars — are also common in Pakistan. A blast in Lahore in February was initially thought to be a militant attack, but turned out to be a gas explosion.

Officials have since been cautious about prematurel­y confirming the nature of explosions. — AP, AFP

 ?? APP ?? Relatives of bomb victims mourn outside the General Hospital in Lahore on Monday. —
APP Relatives of bomb victims mourn outside the General Hospital in Lahore on Monday. —
 ?? AFP ?? Security officials inspect the site after the explosion in Lahore on Monday. —
AFP Security officials inspect the site after the explosion in Lahore on Monday. —

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