Quetta, Peshawar rocked by blasts

A Pakistan army soldier examines the site of a car bombing on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, June 2013. — Photo by AP
A Pakistan army soldier examines the site of a car bombing on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan, Sunday, June 2013. — Photo by AP
Pakistani security personnel (foreground) are pictured at the site of a bomb attack in Badaber, on the outskirts of Peshawar, on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani security personnel (foreground) are pictured at the site of a bomb attack in Badaber, on the outskirts of Peshawar, on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani security personnel and bystanders are pictured at the site of a bomb attack in Badaber, on the outskirts of Peshawar, on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani security personnel and bystanders are pictured at the site of a bomb attack in Badaber, on the outskirts of Peshawar, on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani rescuers and security officials gather at the suicide attack site in Quetta on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani rescuers and security officials gather at the suicide attack site in Quetta on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani rescuers and residents gather at the suicide attack site in Quetta on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Pakistani rescuers and residents gather at the suicide attack site in Quetta on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Relatives mourn the death of loved ones, killed during a bomb attack in nearby Badaber, outside a hospital in Peshawar on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP
Relatives mourn the death of loved ones, killed during a bomb attack in nearby Badaber, outside a hospital in Peshawar on June 30, 2013. — Photo by AFP

QUETTA: At least 28 men and women of Shia Hazara community were killed and 60 others injured in a suicide blast in the Aliabad area of Hazara town on Sunday night. “A suicide bomber blew himself up near a barrier close to Ali Ibn-Abu-Talib Imambargah,” DIG (Investigation) Syed Mobin Ahmed told Dawn.

The proscribed Lashkar-i-Jhangvi has claimed responsibility for the attack. A spokesman for the group who identified himself as Abubakar Siddique told a private TV channel that his group had carried out the attack in the Hazara town.

At least nine women were among the dead.

Sources said that an unidentified man on a bicycle tried to enter the area and when people standing near the barrier tried to stop him he blew himself up.

The blast occurred at the Balkhi Chowk which is near to the Imambargah.

Capital City Police Officer Mir Zubair Mehmood told reporters that prayers were being held inside the Imambargah when the blast took place.

He said the target of the bomber was Imambargah but he could not reach there because people responsible for security of the Imambargah stopped him at the barrier.

He said the head and parts of the bomber’s body had been found.

Eyewitnesses said a large number of people, including women and children, were at the place at the time of the blast.

Press photographer Saeed Ahmed told Dawn that human flesh and limbs were lying all over the place.

Soon after the blast, the sources said, security personnel rushed to the blast site and cordoned off the area. They did not allow even rescue personnel to enter the area for fear of a second blast.

Hazara town resounded with gunfire after the explosion.

Two hand-grenades were found at the blast site which the suicide bomber reportedly carried.

The injured and the bodies were taken to the Bolan Medical College Hospital and the Combined Military Hospital.

Hospital sources said the death toll could rise because at least 10 of the injured were stated to be in serious condition.

Several nearby buildings and vehicles parked in the area were badly damaged by the blast.

This was second bomb attack in Hazara town over the past five months.

The previous blast, caused by explosive in a water-tanker on Feb 16, killed about 100 people and left over 200 injured.

Balochistan Governor Mohammad Khan Achakzai and Chief Minister Dr Abdul Malik Baloch condemned the blast and expressed grief over the loss of lives. They expressed sympathy with the bereaved families.

Official sources at the Chief Minister’s Secretariat told this reporter that the chief minister who was in Islamabad on an official visit, decided to return to Quetta after coming to know about the attack.

“The chief minister has directed officials concerned to ensure adequate medical treatment of the injured,” they said.

In another incident, at least 18 civilians were killed and 46 injured in a car bomb attack on a convoy of the Frontier Corps in Badbher area on the outskirts of Peshawar on Sunday.

Almost all the victims were poor vendors selling fruits, vegetables and corn cobs while the others were passersby and commuters.

The area was littered with parts of human limbs and flesh, vegetables and fruits.

Two FC personnel suffered injuries in the blast.

All the dead and most of the injured were civilians from Badbher and nearby villages of Mashokhel, Mashogagar and Sheikh Mohammadi.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack till late in the night.

The dead included three teenage brothers identified as Tariq, 13, Riasat, 16, and Sadararat, 18, sons of Zarmash, a resident of Badbher village, officials at the Lady Reading Hospital said.

Zarmash is a daily wage worker in Saudi Arabia.

The injured were taken to the Lady Reading Hospital.

Peshawar Deputy Commissioner Mohammad Javed Marwat said initial reports put the death toll at 16, but it could go up because condition of some of the injured was critical. He said police were looking for the culprits in Badbher and nearby villages.

Convoys of security forces have come under frequent attacks on the road linking Peshawar with Kohat in jurisdiction of Badbher and Mattani police stations.

The car which caused the blast was parked in front of the local market near the Badbher police station.

“Around 40kg of explosives was used in the bomb,” Abdul Haq, in-charge of the bomb disposal unit, told journalists at the blast site. He said that four to five mortar shells had been placed inside the car and detonated with a remote control.

Soon after the blast, FC personnel fired in the air which created panic in the area.

Former information minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain was the first politician to reach the hospital to inquire after the health of the injured.

Talking to journalists, he expressed concern over the killing of civilians and said: “It is the responsibility of everyone to condemn terrorism and help victims irrespective of whether one is in the government or not.” He said the provincial government headed by Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf had been issuing statements about the need to hold talks with militants but the latter kept on killing innocent civilians.

He said if the government was interested in holding talks it should immediately form a committee and start the process of negotiations.

Later, Senior Minister Sikandar Hayat Sherpao also visited the hospital.

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