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Today's Paper | December 19, 2024

Published 28 Jun, 2012 02:12pm

Blast kills 13, including Shia pilgrims, in Quetta

QUETTA: At least thirteen people, including policemen and Shia Muslims, were killed and 20 people were injured when a bus carrying pilgrims was targeted with a bomb in Hazar Ganji area on the outskirts of Quetta, DawnNews reported.

The passengers of the bus were returning back from Iran’s city Taftan after a religious pilgrimage.

The bus was collided with a car before both the vehicles exploded, eye witnesses told the media representatives.

The impact of the explosion was so intense that the bus turned over, eye witnesses added.

There is no confirmation on the nature of the blast as yet.

There were around 80 passengers in the bus. Rescue teams are busy in taking passengers out from the bus.

The injured are being shifted to the civil hospital of the city and Bolan Medical complex hospital. Emergency has been imposed in all the hospitals of Quetta.

Police and Frontier Corps (FC) cordoned off the area after the incident as investigation went underway.

“A bus carrying Pakistani Shia Muslims was coming to Quetta from Iran when a bomb exploded near it, killing eleven people including nine Shia pilgrims and two escorting policemen,” senior local police official, Hamid Shakeel, told AFP.

“Our initial investigation suggests it was a remote controlled device planted along the road,” he said.

Another senior local police official, Sikandar Tareen, confirmed the casualties.

Balochistan has become an increasing flashpoint for sectarian violence between Pakistan's majority Sunni Muslims and minority Shias, who account for around a fifth of the country's 167 million population.

Balochistan is also rife with Islamist militancy and a regional insurgency waged by separatists who rose up in 2004 demanding political autonomy and a greater share of profits from the region's wealth of natural resources.

It is one of the most deprived regions of Pakistan despite its wealth in resources, and human rights activists have accused the military of mass arrests and extra-judicial executions in its bid to put down the separatist insurgency.

Around 5,000 people have been killed in outbreaks of sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia militant groups in Pakistan since the late 1980s.

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