Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
International

Suicide Bomber Kills 70 In Pakistan, Media Says 93 Dead

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Aug, 2016 12:42 PM
    A suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded hospital here on Monday killing 70 people and injuring over 100 in one of the worst terror attacks in Pakistan this year, authorities said. The Quetta media, however, put the death toll at 93.
     
    The powerful blast ripped through the emergency ward of the Civil Hospital when nearly 100 lawyers had gathered to collect the body of a prominent lawyer shot dead hours earlier in the city.
     
    The deafening explosion, heard clearly on video, instantly killed dozens, including two television cameramen. The hospital presented a ghastly scene with bloodied bodies and body parts strewn in a small area.
     
    Samaa TV said bodies were strewn on the floor, some still smoking, "amid pools of blood and shattered glass".
     
    A bomb disposal squad said the suicide bomber had around 10 kg of explosives hidden in his vest, Xinhua news agency said. Police found the limbs of the bomber. 
     
    The Pakistan Taliban faction Jamaat ur Arhar claimed responsibility.
     
    ARY News said the dead included at least 25 lawyers. As the explosion ripped through the hospital, Aaj TV cameraman Shehzad Khan could be heard on the camera reciting the "Kalma" in a groaning voice as he died.
     
    The other cameraman to get killed was Mehmood Khan of DawnNews. 
     
     
    Quetta's Urdu media -- Daily Millat, Baaghi TV and Urdu Post -- however, put the death toll at 93. In any case, doctors warned that the toll could rise because some of the injured were in a serious condition.
     
    It was the worst terrorist attack in Pakistan this year since the March 27 bombing at Gulshan-e-Iqbal park in Lahore that left 75 people dead.
     
    As Balochistan, Pakistan's biggest province by area, declared three days of mourning, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif flew to Quetta. Army chief Raheel Sharif visited the injured in the Civil Hospital.
     
    Gen Sharif ordered intelligence agencies to initiate "special combing operations to target those involved in terror attacks", a spokesperson for the military said.
     
    Balochistan Chief Minister Sanaullah Zehri blamed the Indian intelligence agency RAW, saying it was responsible for incidents of terror in Quetta.
     
    His comments came even before the police could say who was responsible for the horrific attack.
     
    The lawyers were at the hospital to take the body of Bilal Anwar Kasi, president of the Balochistan Bar Association who was killed earlier in the city, Dawn reported.
     
    Gunfire erupted after the explosion. 
     
     
    A stampede too broke out, causing chaos at the hospital. Smoke filled the corridors of the emergency ward. Lawyers who survived the blast rushed out to fetch stretchers.
     
    Shocked survivors wept and comforted one another. One journalist broke down after seeing the bloodbath. Many of the dead were in black suits and ties -- the lawyers' uniform.
     
    Police and Frontier Corps surrounded the hospital. An emergency was declared in all Quetta hospitals. Many of the wounded were rushed to the Combined Military Hospital. Some were flown to Karachi.
     
    "This was a security lapse and I am having this personally investigated," Balochistan Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti said.
     
    Prime Minister Sharif expressed his "deep grief and anguish over the loss of precious human lives".
     
    Former Chief Minister Abdul Malik called it the "blackest day" in the history of Balochistan. 
     
    Lawyers across Pakistan denounced the killings in Quetta. Lawyers in Karachi boycotted the courts. The Bar Association of Pakistan called for a three-day mourning.
     
    Lawyers have been frequently targeted in Balochistan.
     
     
    One lawyer, Jahanzeb Alvi, was shot dead on August 3. Bilal Kasi, who himself was shot dead on Monday, had condemned Alvi's murder and announced a two-day boycott of courts.
     
    The principal of University of Balochistan's law college, Barrister Amanullah Achakzai, was also shot dead in June.
     
    Balochistan has experienced violence and targeted killings for more than a decade. 
     
    Balochistan is home to a low-level insurgency by Baloch separatists. Al Qaeda-linked and sectarian militants also operate in the region. Islamabad routinely blames New Delhi for the unrest in Balochistan.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Narendra Modi, Francois Hollande Unveil Ricky Grammy-Winning Indian Artist Ricky Kej's New Album

    Narendra Modi, Francois Hollande Unveil Ricky Grammy-Winning Indian Artist Ricky Kej's New Album
    The music album was released during the International Solar Alliance (ISA) launch event and a music video from the album was screened to the gathering of world leaders present on the occasion. 

    Narendra Modi, Francois Hollande Unveil Ricky Grammy-Winning Indian Artist Ricky Kej's New Album

    A Phone Call From Canada Is A Glimmer Of Hope For One Syrian Refugee Family

    A Phone Call From Canada Is A Glimmer Of Hope For One Syrian Refugee Family
    IRBID, Jordan — Mohammad Mnaahe, only a year old and not yet walking, crawls across the beige carpets in his family's rented apartment about 30 kilometres from the Jordanian border with Syria.

    A Phone Call From Canada Is A Glimmer Of Hope For One Syrian Refugee Family

    Canadian Man Charged With Turtle Smuggling Scheme Expected To Plead Guilty

    Canadian Man Charged With Turtle Smuggling Scheme Expected To Plead Guilty
    ANN ARBOR, Mich. — A Canadian man caught with dozens of turtles inside his pants is getting snapped by the U.S. justice system.

    Canadian Man Charged With Turtle Smuggling Scheme Expected To Plead Guilty

    We Can Do More Than Deliver Two Per Cent Of Airstrikes On ISIL, Stephane Dion Tells NATO

    BRUSSELS —  walked through NATO's doors Tuesday suggesting he won't have to do much of a sales job over the impending withdrawal of Canada's jets from the U.S.-led bombing campaign against militants in Iraq and Syria.

    We Can Do More Than Deliver Two Per Cent Of Airstrikes On ISIL, Stephane Dion Tells NATO

    Email To Clinton: Canadian Foreign Affairs Types Really Hated The Harper Tories

    Email To Clinton: Canadian Foreign Affairs Types Really Hated The Harper Tories
    WASHINGTON — A U.S. official expressed amazement at how deeply detested Canada's Conservative government was by some employees of the Foreign Affairs Department.

    Email To Clinton: Canadian Foreign Affairs Types Really Hated The Harper Tories

    As More And More Americans Say No To Federal Health Survey, Officials Plan Big Changes

    As More And More Americans Say No To Federal Health Survey, Officials Plan Big Changes
    NEW YORK — When the government launched what would become most influential survey to monitor the nation's public health, there were just 75 questions — and 95 per cent of those asked agreed to sit for it.

    As More And More Americans Say No To Federal Health Survey, Officials Plan Big Changes