Los Angeles Times

Pakistan strikes at militants

- By Zulfiqar Ali and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Ali reported from Peshawar and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India. Special correspond­ent Sultan Faizy contribute­d to this report from Kabul, Afghanista­n.

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — The Pakistani army on Friday arrested or killed dozens of suspected militants and launched artillery rounds at targets in neighborin­g Afghanista­n a day after a suicide bombing at a Sufi shrine killed at least 88 people.

Residents in Pakistan’s Khyber tribal district said security forces fired barrages into Afghanista­n’s Nangarhar province, where militants loyal to Islamic State have often found sanctuary.

An Islamic State affiliate claimed responsibi­lity for the bombing Thursday at a shrine to Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, a 13th century Sufi preacher, in southern Pakistan’s Sindh province. Health Ministry officials raised the death toll to 88 people, with approximat­ely 350 wounded, dozens critically.

Security officials said they had killed 44 suspected militants in security operations across the country. Eighteen were killed in the southern port city of Karachi, which lies 100 miles from the shrine.

Pakistani officials have played down the claim by Islamic State loyalists, saying only that the attack came from militants based in Afghanista­n. Pakistan closed its border with Afghanista­n late Thursday, causing long lines of loaded vehicles at two key highway crossings.

Afghan diplomats were summoned to army headquarte­rs in the city of Rawalpindi and given a list of 76 militants “hiding” in Afghanista­n that Pakistan wanted arrested and handed over, officials said.

Afghan officials criticized the Pakistani response. Local officials in Nangharhar province said some 200 rocket shells struck in the border district of Lalpoor, wounding two children and forcing more than 100 families to flee their homes.

“It’s an undeclared war,” said Ahmad Ali, head of the elected provincial council. “People won’t remain quiet and will respond if Pakistan continues.”

Each country has long accused the other of giving shelter to militants that roam across their rugged, porous border.

Shah Husain Mortazawi, deputy spokesman for the Afghan government, said Afghanista­n was committed to fighting cross-border terrorism and called on Pakistan to do the same.

“Afghanista­n is deeply concerned about the shelling by Pakistan in the border areas and urges it to stop immediatel­y,” Mortazawi said.

The golden-domed shrine remained closed Friday as mourners filled the narrow streets of the town of Sehwan Sharif for funeral procession­s. Some bereaved family members and other residents chanted slogans against the government for failing to protect the shrine, with one group setting fire to a car before police dispersed the crowd with tear gas, news agencies reported.

Islamic State loyalists who claim to be part of the South Asia branch of the militant group have taken shelter in eastern Afghanista­n. U.S. and Afghan forces have been battling to oust the Sunni Muslim militants for over a year, including with increased U.S. airstrikes.

Islamic State’s Amaq news agency said the bombing targeted “a Shiite gathering,” although Muslims of all faiths attended the shrine. The Sufi tradition, which emphasizes a personal connection to Islam, has millions of followers across the Muslim world but often has been targeted by Sunni fundamenta­list groups.

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