Arab News

Pakistan, India border ceremony goes ahead; toll touches 60

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LAHORE: Pakistan and India went ahead Monday with a colorful military ceremony at a major border post, defying a suicide attack on the event a day earlier that killed 60 people.

The bomber struck at the Wagah border crossing near the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore on Sunday, causing carnage among crowds leaving the daily “flag-lowering” event that marks the closing of the frontier for the day.

The explosion, which wounded more than 120, was the deadliest to hit Pakistan in more than a year, but an official claimed there was no security lapse — despite admitting having received warning of an attack.

The strike came with Pakistan on high alert for the mourning days of Ashura, a flashpoint for sectarian violence in recent years.

A security source said two alerts had been issued to Punjab provincial officials, including one about a possible attack at Wagah.

However a spokesman for the Rangers paramilita­ry force, which guards the border post, said the attack took place some distance from the parade.

“We had received an alert but the incident occurred in the commercial area, where people were gathered around food shops, the parade lane is quite a distance from the location of the blast,” he said.

“It’s not a security lapse.” At least two different factions of the Tehreek- e- Taleban Pakistan claimed the attack, the first major strike since the army launched an offensive against militant stronghold­s in the tribal northwest in June.

Despite the bloodshed, the ceremony went ahead on Monday, com- plete with Pakistani spectators in the stands.

The Punjab army corps commander Lt. Gen. Naveed Zaman said the turnout “proved that terrorists can’t break the morale and zeal of the nation.” Indian forces also took part on their side of the frontier but Indian spectators were barred.

Like many Pakistanis who attend the event, eyewitness Nawaz Khan had gone on Sunday with family members, visiting from the northweste­rn city of Peshawar.

“There were 14 of us. After the parade I came out of the gate and my brother told me to go back and bring the children,” Khan said.

As he returned with the children, he said, he saw a “young boy” running toward the gate, who was stopped by a Ranger.

“Then there was a huge bang and I saw my brother flying in the air. There were screams all around and the place was filled with the smell of burnt human flesh and blood,” he said.

“I had lost the children and I was screaming for them and then I saw the body of my brother lying on the ground with other bodies,” said Khan, whose children were found unhurt.

A senior officer with India’s Border Security Force, Ashok Kumar, said security would be strengthen­ed as a result of the attack, but said he expected hundreds of Sikhs to go ahead with a planned pilgrimage to Lahore this week.

Security forces across Pakistan were on high alert Monday for possible attacks as Shiite Muslims mark Ashura, the anniversar­y of the death of Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, with mourning procession­s.

Around 10,000 police and paramilita­ry Rangers have been deployed in Islamabad and its twin city Rawalpindi, officials said.

Sectarian violence has been on the rise in recent years, mostly by Sunni Muslim extremists targeting Shiites who make up 20 percent of Pakistan’s 180 million population. At least 11 people were killed in Ashura clashes in Rawalpindi last year.

 ??  ?? IN MOURNING: Pakistani women gather around the bodies of their relatives who were killed in a Sunday suicide bombing, in Lahore, on Monday. (AP)
IN MOURNING: Pakistani women gather around the bodies of their relatives who were killed in a Sunday suicide bombing, in Lahore, on Monday. (AP)

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