THREE DEAD IN SUICIDE BLAST NEAR RAWALPINDI IMAMBARGAH
RAWALPINDI: A powerful blast outside an Imambargah
situated in the heavily guarded Gracey Lines area killed three people,
including two policemen and left 14 injured.
According to News, policemen spotted a suspicious
looking individual on a motorcycle in the parking lot of the Imambargah near
the Nur Khan Air Base. The attacker blew himself up when the policemen tried to
tackle him.
About 700 people were attending a majlis at the
time of the attack. As a result three people, including a SHO lost their lives.
The dead and the injured were taken to the Benazir Bhutto Hospital and District
Headquarters Hospital.
“We have three bodies and 14 wounded people at our
hospital,” Asif Qadir Mir, chief of the local government hospital, told AFP. The
blast was heard far away. Police and military personnel cordoned off the area
and all roads leading to Gracy Lane were closed to traffic.
Khalid Mehmood, the driver of a police van who was
on duty at the Imambagah, said a man parked his motorcycle by the roadside and
started walking towards the Imambargah. When Sub-Inspector Amanat Ali and other
policemen asked him to stop for search, he detonated the bomb.
City Police Officer Akhtar Umar Lalika told that it
was a suicide attack. The bomber blew himself up when he was intercepted by
policemen outside the Imambargah. Several bikes and cars parked outside the
Imambargah were damaged.
According to bomb disposal experts, four to five
pounds of high explosives, laced with ball-bearings, were used in the attack. The
head and legs were believed to be of the bomber. Black clothes and a green
jacket were retrieved from the scene.
A damaged pistol, wooden butt of a rifle and four
spent bullet casings were also found. However, it could not be ascertained
whether the pistol belonged to the suicide bomber or police.
Majlis-i-Wahadat-Muslameen (MWM),
Tehrik-i-Nifaz-i-Fiqh-i-Jafaria condemned the attack and said that the
government has failed to curb sectarian violence in the country.
There has been a rise in sectarian violence in
Pakistan after several deadly clashes between Sunni and Shia Muslim groups near
Islamabad in November. Allama Nasir Abbas, a Shia cleric, was killed late Sunday in Lahore, the capital of
Punjab province, after addressing a religious gathering.
On November 19, gunmen killed a senior Shia university
director along with his driver in Lahore, while another Shia leader and his
guard were killed in Karachi in early December. Three days later, Shamsur
Rehman Muawiya, chief of the Sunni organisation Ahl-e-Sunnat Wal Jammat for
Punjab province, was killed in
Lahore.
Pakistan is rife with sectarian clashes, with Sunni
militant groups linked to Al Qaeda and the Taliban often attacking gatherings
by Shias, who constitute some 20 per cent of the country's population.
No comments:
Post a Comment