Death toll in twin suicide bombing in Pakistan rises to 52

Attack on Shias was one of worst sectarian attacks in country in months

A man who was injured in one of yesterday’s suicide bomb attacks  receives treatment at a hospital in Parachinar  in Pakistan’s tribal area on the Afghan border. Photograph: Reuters
A man who was injured in one of yesterday’s suicide bomb attacks receives treatment at a hospital in Parachinar in Pakistan’s tribal area on the Afghan border. Photograph: Reuters

The death toll from a pair of coordinated suicide bombs targeting Shia s in a volatile Pakistani town near the Afghan border rose to 52 overnight, officials said tpday, in one of the worst sectarian attacks in the country in months.

Tensions between Shia Muslims and Pakistan’s majority Sunnis have risen in past years, with radical Sunni Islamist groups frequently attacking Shias whom they see as heretics.

Yesterday, evening, two suicide bombers on motorcycles struck in the northwestern town of Parachinar just as people flocked to a busy marketplace to buy food for their evening meals after a day of fasting during the holy month of Ramadan.

Riaz Mahsud, the top administrator of the predominantly Shia Kurram area, said the death toll, originally reported at 39, jumped to 52 after several people died from their wounds during the night. He said all the victims were Shias.

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A previously unknown group called Ansarul Mujahideen claimed responsibility for the attack.

"We plan more similar attacks against the Shia community in Pakistan to seek revenge for the brutalities of Shias against Sunni Muslims in Syria and Iraq, " Abu Baseer, who identified himself as a spokesman for the group, told Reuters by telephone.

Parachinar is home to a significant Shia community which has been previously targeted by militants. Shia Muslims make up a little over 10 per cent of Pakistan’s population of 180 million.

Separately, gunmen attacked a coast guard checkpoint in the volatile southwestern region of Baluchistan near the Iranian border, firing rockets and killing seven security officials, the region’s Home Secretary Akbar Durrani said.

A banned militant group known as the Baloch Liberation Front claimed responsibility for the attack, saying its fighters had killed 25 security personnel and kidnapped two soldiers. Two militants were killed, its spokesman said.

Reuters