The Borneo Post

IS claims pre-Christmas suicide bombing of Pakistan church

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QUETTA, Pakistan: A suicide bomb attack on a Pakistan church claimed by the Islamic State group killed at least eight people and wounded 30 during a service on Sunday, just over a week before Christmas.

Two women were among the dead at a Methodist church in the restive southweste­rn city of Quetta in Balochista­n province, said provincial Home Secretary Akbar Harifal.

Several of the wounded were in serious condition, police added.

Officials said police intercepte­d and shot dead one attacker outside the church before he could detonate his bomb. But the second managed to reach the church’s main door, where he blew himself up.

“Police were quick to react and stop the attackers from entering into the main hall,” provincial police chief Moazzam Jah told AFP.

Each attacker was carrying 15 kilogramme­s of explosive plus grenades, said civil defence official Aslam Tareen.

IS, in a brief statement on its Amaq news agency, claimed responsibi­lity.

Balochista­n provincial home minister Sarfraz Bugti said around 250 people normally attend the church on Sundays, but the congregati­on had swelled to around 400 because it was close to Christmas.

“God forbid, if the terrorists had succeeded in their plans more than 400 precious lives would have been at stake,” tweeted the home minister.

An AFP reporter at the scene saw shattered pews, shoes and broken musical instrument­s littered across the blood-smeared floor of the church.

Liaqat Masih, a member of the congregati­on, said he was heartbroke­n by the violence and feared for his life as the firefight

Police were quick to react and stop the attackers from entering into the main hall.

erupted between one attacker and police, who were later reinforced by paramilita­ries and regular troops.

“I am devastated to see many of our dear ones dead and wounded today here in front of me,” said Masih, 35.

Hours after the attack reports surfaced that a total of four attackers had been involved, with two escaping.

Senior police official Abdul Razzaq Cheema said investigat­ors were analysing CCTV footage to check the claim and had launched a search for any further suspects.

Christians make up an estimated 1.6 per cent of Pakistan’s 200 million people and have long faced discrimina­tion -- sidelined into lowly paid jobs and sometimes the target of trumped- up blasphemy charges.

Along with other religious minorities, the community has also been hit by Islamic militants over the years.

Following the latest attack, dozens of Christians protested in the northweste­rn city of Peshawar and called on officials to protect religious minorities.

In 2013 82 people were killed when suicide bombers targeted a church in the city.

And last year Lahore suffered one of Pakistan’s deadliest attacks during the Easter season -- a suicide bomb in a park that killed more than 70 people including many children.

The bombing was later claimed by the Jamaat ul Ahrar faction of the Pakistani Taliban.

Police and troops have been battling Islamist and nationalis­t insurgenci­es in mineral- rich Balochista­n for more than a decade.

Balochista­n, bordering Iran and Afghanista­n, is the largest of the country’s four provinces but its roughly seven million people have long argued they do not get a fair share of its vast gas and mineral wealth.

Efforts to promote peace and developmen­t have reduced the violence considerab­ly in recent years.

The push includes continuing work on a mammoth Chinese infrastruc­ture project – the China- Pakistan Economic Corridor – which will provide Beijing with a modern- day Silk Road to the Arabian Sea through Balochista­n’s deep- sea port of Gwadar. — AFP

Moazzam Jah, provincial police chief

 ??  ?? Pakistani investigat­ors collect evidence a day after a suicide attack in the Methodist Church in Quetta. — AFP photo
Pakistani investigat­ors collect evidence a day after a suicide attack in the Methodist Church in Quetta. — AFP photo

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