The Star Early Edition

Deadly blast: minister had been warned

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LAHORE: A Pakistani provincial minister killed in a suicide bomb attack had been warned he was a target for retaliatio­n by a militant after police killed the leader of the radical sectarian group last month.

Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada was among at least 16 people killed at his political office near his hometown of Attock, about 80km west of the capital Islamabad.

He had told Reuters that police had cautioned him to increase security and restrict his movements following the killing of Lashkar-eJhangvi chief Malik Ishaq in a shootout with police on July 29.

Two days after Ishaq’s killing, Khanzada said he, along with at least 20 other top politician­s and senior bureaucrat­s in Punjab province, had been told they could be targeted in reprisal attacks.

A Punjab police official, Haider Ashraf, said police had increased security at major government installati­ons, issued advisories to potential targets and increased the number of checkpoint­s across the province following Ishaq’s killing.

“Obviously they are always trying to hit us, and after Malik Ishaq’s killing, the threat was definitely heightened,” Ashraf said.

Police have said Ishaq, who for years led Lashkar-e-Jhangvi on a spree of deadly bombings and gun attacks on minority Shia Muslims, was killed in a shootout during a raid as he tried to escape. Others have said his death bore the hallmarks of an extrajudic­ial killing.

After Sunday’s suicide bomb- ing, two smaller offshoot militant groups claimed responsibi­lity for killing Khanzada, but police, in a report yesterday, identified Lashkar-e-Jhangvi as well as the Pakistani Taliban as prime suspects.

Two suicide bombers affiliated with the Taliban had carried out the bombing at Khanzada’s office, according to a provincial government official familiar with the report.

Speaking at a cabinet meeting yesterday, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif vowed to “move forward with no holds barred” to take on the militants responsibl­e.

“It is the responsibi­lity of the Punjab government to honour Shuja Khanzada’s death and not to show any compromise or latitude to the terrorists,” he said. – Reuters

 ?? PICTURE: KHURAM PARVEZ / REUTERS ?? CARNAGE: An injured man walks away after a blast near the home of Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada in Attock, Pakistan, on Sunday. The bomb killed Khanzada and at least 15 others.
PICTURE: KHURAM PARVEZ / REUTERS CARNAGE: An injured man walks away after a blast near the home of Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada in Attock, Pakistan, on Sunday. The bomb killed Khanzada and at least 15 others.

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