The Columbus Dispatch

40 people killed in bomb, gun attacks in 3 Pakistani cities

- By Riaz Khan and Abdul Sattar

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — At least 40 people were killed and nearly 100 wounded Friday in four separate bomb and gun attacks in three major Pakistani cities, officials said.

A suicide bomber was involved in the first car bombing near the office of the provincial police chief in the southweste­rn city of Quetta that killed at least 12 people and wounded 20. There were conflictin­g claims of responsibi­lity for this attack from different extremist groups.

Hours later twin bombings, minutes apart, hit a crowded market in a Shiite-dominated city in Parachinar, the main city in the Kurram tribal region, and killed 24 people, mostly minority Shiite Muslims, according to government administra­tor Zahid Hussain.

Friday evening, gunmen in the port city of Karachi attacked police officers at a roadside restaurant and killed four of them before fleeing, according to senior police officer Asif Ahmed.

The bomb and gun attacks come a few days before the Muslim holiday of Eid-alFitr, which ends the holy month of Ramadan. TV footage showed panicked people rushing to safety following the Parachinar market bombings.

Mohammad Amir, an official at a government-run hospital in Parachinar, said they had received 24 dead bodies and more than 20 of the wounded were listed in critical condition.

Hussain said a severed head of a man was found near the scene of blasts, indicating the second attack in Parachinar might have been carried out by a suicide bomber but officers are still investigat­ing to determine the exact nature of bombings.

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 ?? [ARSHAD BUTT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] ?? Pakistani police examine the site of an explosion in Quetta. At least a dozen people were killed in Friday’s bombing, which was near the office of the provincial police chief.
[ARSHAD BUTT/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS] Pakistani police examine the site of an explosion in Quetta. At least a dozen people were killed in Friday’s bombing, which was near the office of the provincial police chief.

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