Khaleej Times

Hang terrorists, say kin of blast victims

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lahore — Anger was growing in Pakistan on Tuesday as the griefstric­ken relatives of 26 people killed by a suicide bomber in Lahore a day earlier buried their loved ones and demanded the government publicly hang the mastermind­s of the attack.

Families and residents in the bustling eastern city demanded action as they attended funeral prayers, and as the chief minister of Punjab province Shahbaz Sharif — brother of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif — visited survivors in hospital.

“We demand from the Government of Pakistan that those who are involved in this incident and those who are the facilitato­rs should be hanged in public,” Hafiz Naseeruddi­n, uncle of a policeman killed in the blast, said.

“We came here in great grief,” added Shaikh Rizwan, a local resident who attended the funeral prayers for some of the victims.

“Twenty-six people were martyred here yesterday, I request my government that please uproot these terrorists fully so our country can progress,” he said.

The powerful blast on Monday hit a busy vegetable market on a bustling main road in the southern part of Lahore, blowing out the windows in nearby buildings.

Many of those killed in the attack were policemen who were clearing shopping stalls that had illegally encroached on to the road.

On Tuesday distraught relatives carried the coffins of two policemen, brothers who were killed in the attack, to a petrol pump which had been turned into a makeshift prayer ground.

Floral wreaths from local police chiefs were placed on the wooden coffins as family members wept.

Police have said their initial investigat­ions show the attack, claimed by the outlawed Pakistani Taleban, was carried out by a suicide bomber.

Forensic experts were collecting evidence from the site of the blast on Tuesday, an AFP video reporter saw. 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 also 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

Twenty-six people were martyred, I request my govt that please uproot these terrorists completely Shaikh Rizwan, a local resident

We demand from the govt that those involved in this crime and their facilitato­rs should be hanged in public

Hafiz Naseeruddi­n, uncle of a policeman killed in the blast

brutal attack on a school 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 operations in the tribal areas, where militants had previously operated with impunity. —

 ?? AP ?? Relatives of suicide bombing victims mourn during a funeral in Lahore on Tuesday. A suicide bomber on a motorcycle struck near a police team on Monday killing 26 people and left many more wounded. —
AP Relatives of suicide bombing victims mourn during a funeral in Lahore on Tuesday. A suicide bomber on a motorcycle struck near a police team on Monday killing 26 people and left many more wounded. —
 ?? AP ?? Mourners carry the caskets of two brothers and fellow police officers, who were killed in the Monday suicide bombing, for funeral prayers in Lahore, on Tuesday. —
AP Mourners carry the caskets of two brothers and fellow police officers, who were killed in the Monday suicide bombing, for funeral prayers in Lahore, on Tuesday. —

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