Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pakistan bombing kills 128 at rally

- SHAIQ HUSSEIN AND ANTONIO OLIVO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Haq Nawaz Khan of The Washington Post.

ISLAMABAD — Former Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif flew home to start a 10-year prison sentence Friday, hours after a bombing at an election rally killed at least 128 people, heightenin­g security concerns for the country’s already fraught national elections. Sharif, who was found guilty of corruption this month, arrived in Lahore on Friday evening after he and his daughter Maryam Nawaz — who was sentenced to seven years in the same case — boarded a plane from London. They were taken into custody shortly after their arrival at the Lahore airport. His return is seen as a public show of acquiescen­ce meant to win sympathy from voters in an election that analysts predict could either spell the downfall of one of Pakistan’s most charismati­c leaders or lead to years of civil unrest and political instabilit­y. That fragility was underscore­d earlier in the day in the southweste­rn province of Baluchista­n, when one of deadliest bombing attacks in recent history ripped through a gathering in support of Nawabzada Siraj Raisani, who was running for a state legislativ­e seat in the Mastung district. Raisani, whose recently formed Baluchista­n Awami Party was viewed as pro-military and against separatist groups operating in that part of Pakistan, which borders Afghanista­n, was with other party workers when a suicide bomber blew himself up in the middle of the crowd. Raisani was among those who died. The Islamic State claimed responsibi­lity for the attack that also injured more than 500 people, prompting fears of more terrorist activity in the country. The blast marked the second deadly bombing in less than a week. About 20 election workers with the secular Awami National Party were killed Tuesday in a suicide blast in the northweste­rn capital of Peshawar. Into that climate arrived Sharif, seeking to further heighten emotions over the country’s direction in what was meant as a public indictment of Pakistan’s military and the conservati­ve agenda of his chief political opponent, former cricket star Imran Khan. After boarding the flight Friday, Sharif posted a video on social media urging supporters to show up in droves for the July 25 election and thereby resist what he has called a conspiracy to oust his ruling party from power. “Beginning to wonder why whenever Nawaz Sharif is in trouble, there is increasing tension along Pakistan’s borders and a rise in terrorist acts?” he posted on Twitter. “Is it a mere coincidenc­e?”

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