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Lahore update: suicide bomber killed at least 70 people

PostPosted: Sun Mar 27, 2016 8:59 pm
Author: Anthea
A suicide bomber killed at least 65 people

LAHORE, Pakistan — A suicide bomber killed at least 65 people, mostly women and children, at a public park in the Pakistani city of Lahore on Sunday (March 27), government officials and police said, striking at the heart of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's political base of Punjab.

The blast occurred in the parking area of Gulshan-e-Iqbal Park, a few meters away from children's swings. Around 300 people were injured in the explosion, senior police officer Haider Ashraf said.

Jamaat ul-Ahrar, a Taliban splinter group, has claimed responsibility for the attack. Ahsanullah Ahsan, a spokesman for the group, said the attack was targeting the Pakistani Christian community and warned that more attacks are to come.

Pakistan, a nuclear-armed nation of 190 million people, is plagued by a Taliban insurgency, criminal gangs and sectarian violence. Punjab is its biggest and wealthiest province.

The park had been particularly busy on Sunday evening due to Pakistani Christians gathering for the Easter holiday weekend.

In 2014, Pakistan launched an offensive against the Taliban and affiliated jihadist fighters in North Waziristan, seeking to deprive them of safe havens from which to launch attacks in both Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Punjab has traditionally been more peaceful than other parts of Pakistan. Sharif's opponents have accused him of tolerating militancy in return for peace in his province, a charge he strongly denies.

Last year, a bomb killed a popular Pakistani provincial minister and at least eight others when it destroyed the minister's home in Punjab.

http://www.nrttv.com/EN/Details.aspx?Jimare=6059

Re: Lahore Pakistan: suicide bomber killed at least 65 peopl

PostPosted: Sun Mar 27, 2016 9:24 pm
Author: Anthea
The Washington Post

Taliban splinter group claims attack on Christians at Pakistan park; 60 dead

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — A suicide blast claimed by Islamist militants ripped through crowds of families celebrating Easter at a park in the city of Lahore on Sunday, killing at least 60 people and injuring another 300 in an attack the jihadists said had deliberately targeted Christians.

The attack was carried out by a suicide bomber in the parking lot of Gulshan e-Iqbal Park at about 6:30 in the evening, transforming a joyful scene of picnicking families into a spectacle of chaos and horror. Many children were among the dead, local officials said.

A spokesman for the Jamaat ul-Ahrar militant group -- an offshoot of the Pakistani Taliban -- asserted responsibility in a telephone interview on Sunday.

“It was our people who attacked the Christians in Lahore, celebrating Easter,” the spokesman, Ehsanullah Ehsan, said. “It’s our message to the government that we will carry out such attacks again until sharia [Islamic law] is imposed in the country.”

Pakistan, a country of 190 million, has suffered for years from sectarian violence and Islamist militancy, including a Taliban-led insurgency in the tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan. Christians make up about 1 percent of Pakistan’s population, but have maintained a larger presence in Lahore.

In Lahore, Parveen Masih, a 30-year-old Christian woman, said she had gone to the park with her husband and kids to celebrate Easter. They were there when the bomb exploded.

“This attack was about nothing other than to sabotage our happiness,” Masih, who was wounded in the face, said in a telephone interview. “We had only a few days to celebrate, and they didn’t even let us enjoy those.”

The government of Punjab province – where the attack occurred, and which is Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s political stronghold – announced three days of mourning. A statement from the office of Punjab’s chief minister, Shahbaz Sharif, who is the prime minister’s brother, pledged that the culprits would be brought to trial.

“Those who targeted innocent citizens do not deserve to be called humans,” Shahbaz Sharif posted on his Twitter account. “We will hunt you down,” he said. And “make sure your terror infrastructure is dismantled completely.”

Nawaz Sharif, the prime minister, met with his security advisers following the attack, , and they reached “key decisions” on how to respond, a statement from his office said.

Ehsanullah Ehsan, the Jamaat ul-Ahrar spokesman, declared that the militants would strike again in Punjab. The group broke away from the Pakistani Taliban, or Tehreek-e-Taliban, in 2014, as a result of infighting between top commanders. Jamaat ul-Ahrar rejoined the Taliban in March 2015, but still maintains its own faction within the group.

The top security official in the province, Haider Ashraf, said an initial forensic investigation into the attackconcluded that the suicide bomber had packed more than 20 pounds of explosives in his vest. Ball bearings, typically used in bomb attacks to maximize casualties, were found at the scene, Ashraf said.

On Sunday, March 27, a bomb exploded in a crowded market in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore claiming the lives of at least 60 people. (AP)

“We can say it was suicide blast, in which most of the Christian families and Muslim families who went to Gulshan-e-Iqbal park to enjoy the holiday were targeted,” he said, adding that the attacker detonated his explosives near an area marked off for women.

Witnesses to the carnage described body parts scattered in the wake of the attack, Pakistan’s Dawn newspaper reported. Images on social media showed panic and chaos in the moments after the blast, and medics ferrying the wounded away on stretchers.

In one case, four members of a single family were killed, a medic said. The only survivor was a 10-year-old boy, who was also injured.

“I was about to enter the park with my kids” when the explosion happened, said Anwar Ali, aresident of Lahore. “My kids started crying and I held them tightly when I saw the wounded.”

In a statement on Sunday, the State Department said that the United States “stands with the people and government of Pakistan at this difficult hour.”

“Attacks like these only deepen our shared resolve to defeat terrorism around the world,” the statement said.

The government of Punjab announced on its Twitter account that it was offering free rides to those who wished to donate blood to the victims.

In Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital, the army was deployed on Sunday to the “Red Zone” area of the city to help quell unrest following a violent protest march by Muslims. Thousands of demonstrators turned out to denounce the execution last month of Mumtaz Qadri, who assassinated the former Punjab governor, Salmaan Taseer, in 2011. Taseer had spoken out against Pakistan’s blasphemy law.

Police could not halt the demonstrators, who rampaged across central Islamabad, setting buildings on fire on Sunday. The Red Zone area of the capital houses a number of vital government institutions, including parliament and the prime minister’s house.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/ex ... story.html

Re: Lahore Pakistan: suicide bomber killed at least 65 peopl

PostPosted: Mon Mar 28, 2016 11:17 pm
Author: Anthea
Death toll in Pakistan bombing climbs past 70

As Pakistan began burying its dead Monday, authorities counted 29 children among those killed by an Easter suicide bombing in an amusement park, victims of a terrorist attack that has reinforced growing feelings of dread here.

Although 2015 was relatively quiet, horrified Pakistanis are again asking what their government can do to protect them from sectarian violence.

More than 70 people altogether were killed in the devastating attack Sunday in Lahore. Officials vowed to hunt down the Islamist militant bombers who claimed they targeted Christians — yet killed many of their Muslim brethren in the bargain.

Even after a week of terrorist violence in Iraq, Turkey and Belgium, the attack here nonetheless became a focus of global dismay.

It was the second attack on an educational institution this year, and deadliest attack in Pakistan since 130 were killed at a school in Peshawar in late 2014 — a shock to the nation that led to an unexpectedly peaceful 2015. That calm period now seems to be over.

Security forces arrested a “number of terrorist suspects and facilitators” in at least five separate raids in cities across Punjab province, where Lahore is located, according to Lt. Gen. Asim Bajwa, an army spokesman. Bajwa also said that “a huge cache of arms and ammunition” was recovered in the operations, but he did not say where the weapons stockpile was found.

Police in Lahore said Monday that they were investigating whether the suicide bomber — who detonated an explosives-packed vest in a crowded park Sunday evening — had accomplices. The blast ripped through crowds of families celebrating Easter and a school break, transforming a joyful scene into a spectacle of chaos and horror. The city was in a period of official mourning Monday, with schools and markets closed and little traffic.

At the Vatican, Pope Francis on Monday decried the Easter bombing as “vile and abominable” and called for Pakistan’s religious minorities to be protected. He urged authorities in Pakistan to “make every effort to restore security and serenity” to Pakistanis, according to the Vatican’s website.

Pakistani authorities noted that more Muslims were killed and injured than Christians. Of those who died at the scene, 14 were Christian, 44 were Muslim and nine could not immediately be identified, according to Muhammad Iqbal, the superintendent of police for operations in Lahore.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif arrived in Lahore, which is one of his political strongholds, to visit the wounded in one of the city’s many hospitals, his office said. He also announced he was canceling a planned trip to Washington to attend a nuclear summit later this week.

“Our goal is not only to eliminate terror infrastructure but also the extremist mind-set, which is a threat to our way of life,” Sharif said from Lahore, according to a statement from his office. “We must take this war to the doors of [these] terrorist groups,” he said. “God willing, we will wipe out them out.”

A suicide blast exploded on Easter Sunday in a crowded park in the eastern Pakistani city of Lahore claiming the lives of more than 70 people. (Erin Patrick O'Connor/The Washington Post)

A splinter faction of the Pakistani Taliban, Jamaat ul-Ahrar, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying, “it was our people who attacked the Christians in Lahore, celebrating Easter.”

Pakistan, a country of 190 million, has suffered for years from sectarian violence and Islamist militancy, including a Taliban-led insurgency in the tribal areas on the border with Afghanistan. Recent terrorist attacks targeting minorities and schools have left many ordinary Pakistanis scared and on edge.

“This shouldn’t be happening,” said Rani Farzand, a teacher and neighbor of an 8-year-old girl who died in the blast. “The kids are not safe in the parks, in the schools, in the mosques. Where should we send our children? What should we do?”

On Monday, little remained of the carnage at the scene at Gulshan-e-Iqbal park, a leafy oasis in Pakistan’s second largest city.

Police had cordoned off the blood-stained area between a fountain and a bumper-car ride in the small children’s amusement section where the bomb exploded. Objects were left like small grace notes — a jeweled sandal, mangled reading glasses, a child’s shoe.

The identification card of the suicide bomber was discovered amid the debris, local media reported. The reports identified the bomber as Muhammad Yousaf Farid, born in 1988. Those reports could not be confirmed.

At Jinnah Hospital in Lahore, where about half of the more than 300 injured were taken Sunday night, 67 remained hospitalized with a variety of injuries, including burns and shrapnel wounds, doctors said. Politicians and TV anchors weaved through the beds, where occupants were labeled “blast victim.”

Among them were two small children, their beds marked with signs saying “unknown.” Their family died in the blast, and they had yet to be linked with other relatives.

Some were still clearly in shock. Zeeshan Taaj, 23, had been walking through the park on his way back from a pickup cricket match when the bomb detonated. He injured his leg in the aftermath and is trying to come to terms with what he saw: “Fire and smoke,” he said. “I have seen chopped legs blown off, heads and dead bodies scattered all around me.”

A friend tried to comfort him by tucking a sheet around his still bloodied leg wound.

In another bed, Tasleem Sultan, 40, described how she and four other adult family members took eight children to the kiddie amusement park Sunday night and found it bustling on the warm evening. Her niece, Zainab, 8, had donned her best red dress and put flower-shaped barrettes in her hair for the occasion. She rode an elephant on the merry-go-round. She was holding her aunt’s hand when the force of the explosion separated them.

Later, her father found Zainab, bleeding and lifeless.

“I was weeping. I am still in shock,” Jamshaid Iqbal, 35, said in an interview at his family home after her funeral. “Why isn’t the government protecting us?”

In Islamabad on Monday, thousands of Muslim demonstrators protesting the execution of Islamist assassin Mumtaz Qadri staged a sit-in inside the city’s “Red Zone,” which is home to a number of vital government institutions, including parliament and the prime minister’s house. Qadri assassinated Punjab’s governor, Salman Taseer, in 2011 over the latter’s opposition to Pakistan’s blasphemy laws.

Most blasphemy cases are lodged against non-Muslims for violations such as desecrating the Koran, Islam’s holy book, according to rights monitors. The army was deployed Sunday night to protect government buildings after the protesters rampaged across the city, damaging property and setting buildings on fire.

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