A police vehicle was badly damaged in blast near Data Darbar in Lahore. — DawnNewsTV
IGP Arif Nawaz, while addressing a press conference, said that police are posted near the shrine around the clock to provide security.
He said that authorities had maintained a general security alert, but there had been no specific warning about a threat to the shrine.
The IGP said the attacker could have caused more damage because of the direction he had approached from, but he instead made a beeline for the police car stationed in the area for protection of the shrine.
According to the DIG Operations Ashfaq Khan, some 306 police officials in the city have lost their lives in the line of duty.
Buzdar orders inquiry
Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar condemned the attack and ordered an inquiry into the incident, summoning reports from the Punjab Inspector General of Police and the additional chief secretary of interior, according to a handout issued by the Punjab government.
The chief minister also called a high-level meeting at the Punjab Safe City Headquarters and cancelled his scheduled visits to Bhakkar, Sargodha and Sheikhupura. He was briefed at the headquarters and said that he has been monitoring the situation.
The chief minister offered his condolences to the families of the victims and instructed administrations to provide the injured with the best facilities for treatment.
Prime Minister Imran Khan also condemned the loss of lives in the attack, expressing grief and condoling with the victims’ families for their loss.
PML-N President Shahbaz Sharif and Awami National Party General Secretary Ameer Hoti both condemned the attack.
The former chief minister of Punjab expressed grief at the loss of life and said, "The peace that prevailed in the last five years needs to be restored in the country."
"Terrorists have no religion. The government and law enforcement agencies should be worried about such incidents of terrorism," Hoti said.
Attacks continue despite crackdown
Data Darbar is one of the country's most popular Sufi shrines where Sufi saint Syed Ali bin Osman Al Hajvery is buried.
Pakistanis in large numbers visit the 11th century shrine, which has long been home to colourful Sufi festivals and a prime destination for the country's myriad sects, making it a soft target for militant attacks.
Although security has dramatically improved and militant violence sharply declined in Pakistan following a sustained crackdown against terrorism in recent years after the Peshawar Army Public School attack in 2014, militants retain the ability to carry out dramatic attacks.
Over the last two years, Lahore has been free of the kind of attacks that were once common.
An attack in the city in March last year left nine people dead, while a major blast in a park in 2016 targeting Christians celebrating Easter killed more than 70 people.