A suicide bomber killed 13
people and injured 23 in northwest Pakistan Monday, in an attack which
the Taliban described as
revenge for the hanging of an Islamist assassin
last week.
The bomber,
whom police said was aged around 20 and had up to six kilograms (13
pounds) of explosives strapped to his chest, attacked as lawyers and
litigants were arriving at a court complex during the morning rush hour
in the town of Shabqadar.
Senior
police official Fayaz Khan said 13 people were killed and 23 wounded
after the bomber blew himself up inside the complex, with the toll
confirmed by a local administration official.
Schoolteacher
Murid Khan, who was in the complex for a land dispute hearing, said he
was getting documents photocopied when he heard gunshots.
"I looked back and there was a huge explosion," he said, adding the blast threw him over the photocopier.
"I heard screams and saw black clouds of smoke, then I fell unconscious" after being hit by two pieces of shrapnel, he said.
The Pakistani Taliban's
Jamat-ul-Ahrar faction claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it
avenged the hanging of Mumtaz Qadri -- feted as a hero by Islamists
after he gunned down the liberal governor of Punjab in 2011 over a call
to reform the country's blasphemy law.
Qadri
was hanged on February 29 in what analysts described as a key moment in
Pakistan's long fight against militancy, saying it demonstrated the
government's resolve to uphold the rule of law rather than allow
extremism to flourish.
His funeral brought up to 100,000 people on to the streets, hailing him as a hero.
Monday's
blast also targeted the court complex because Pakistan's judiciary was
strengthening "un-Islamic laws", Ehsanullah Ehsan, a spokesman for the
Taliban, told AFP.
Local TV channels showed footage of victims being rushed to hospitals soon after the blast.
Authorities
said two children and two policemen were among the dead. Senior
regional police official Saeed Wazir praised the bravery of officers who
"sacrificed their lives".
There were around 300 people in the complex at the time, another police official said. Local bar association president Shair Qadir said they had requested security after receiving threats of an attack, but no action was taken in what he termed a police failure.
Shabqadar is near the Mohmand tribal district, one of seven semi-autonomous regions bordering Afghanistan where militants from Al-Qaeda and the Taliban had established bases in the past.
Islamabad launched a
military offensive in the tribal areas in 2014 that has reportedly
killed thousands of militants and pushed the rest over the border to
Afghanistan, resulting in improved security inside Pakistan.
However, insurgents associated with the Pakistani Taliban occasionally carry out attacks from bases inside Afghanistan.
Shabqadar
is some 30 kilometres (18 miles) west of Charsadda, where extremists
attacked a university on January 20 in a rampage that left 21 dead.
Source: AFP
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