Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Pakistan opens bomb probe to China

- RIAZ KHAN

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — Pakistani authoritie­s have shared with China the preliminar­y findings of an investigat­ion into a deadly attack that killed five Chinese nationals and their Pakistani driver in the country’s volatile northwest, officials said Wednesday.

Authoritie­s were doing DNA testing on the remains of a suicide bomber who rammed his explosives-laden car into a vehicle that was carrying the Chinese engineers and constructi­on workers.

The attack took place in Shangla, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province where thousands of Chinese nationals work on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, which includes a multitude of megaprojec­ts such as road constructi­on, power plants and agricultur­e. The corridor is a lifeline for Pakistan’s cashstrapp­ed government, currently facing one of its worst economic crises.

The five Chinese nationals were heading Tuesday to the Dasu Dam, the biggest hydropower project in Pakistan, where they worked. Their remains were transporte­d to the capital, Islamabad, local police official Altaf Khan said, adding that the deceased had a police escort when the attack happened.

Khan said DNA testing was necessary as the bomber’s face was beyond recognitio­n. He hoped the results of the DNA tests will help identify the bomber.

Pakistani officials said they shared the latest investigat­ion developmen­ts with their Chinese counterpar­ts. China was expected to send its own experts Wednesday to the attack site to conduct an independen­t investigat­ion while collaborat­ing with Pakistani authoritie­s.

Khan also said they have further expanded a search started a day earlier for the attacker’s possible accomplice­s.

The U.N. Security Council in a statement Wednesday condemned “in the strongest terms the heinous and cowardly terrorist attack.” The council “underlined the need to hold perpetrato­rs, organizers, financiers and sponsors of these reprehensi­ble acts of terrorism accountabl­e and bring them to justice.”

No group had claimed responsibi­lity for the attack as of Wednesday, but suspicion was likely to fall on separatist­s and the breakaway Gul Bahadur faction of the Pakistani Taliban, known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan or TTP, and is a separate group, but a close ally of the Afghan Taliban.

The TTP denied being behind the suicide bombing in a statement Wednesday, saying: “We are in no way related to the attack on the Chinese engineers.”

The Chinese foreign ministry condemned the attack and offered “deep condolence­s to the deceased” in a statement Wednesday.

The ministry said China has asked “Pakistan to thoroughly investigat­e the incident as soon as possible, hunt down the perpetrato­rs, and bring them to justice” and added that “any attempt to undermine China-Pakistan cooperatio­n will never succeed.”

Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif promised a swift conclusion to the investigat­ion during a visit with the Chinese ambassador, Jiang Zaidong, on Tuesday.

Zaidong, accompanie­d by Pakistani officials, visited the Dasu dam Wednesday, according to a statement by Pakistan’s government.

The statement also said Sharif presided over a high-level security meeting, attended by the country’s powerful army chief Gen. Asim Munir. In the meeting, the premier said Tuesday’s attack was “creating mistrust” between Pakistan and China and vowed to bring “the barbaric perpetrato­rs to justice.”

 ?? (AP) ?? Volunteers carry a casket of a Chinese national, who was killed in the suicide bombing, at a hospital in Basham, in Shangla District in the Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province on Tuesday.
(AP) Volunteers carry a casket of a Chinese national, who was killed in the suicide bombing, at a hospital in Basham, in Shangla District in the Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province on Tuesday.

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