Photographs: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters
Sixty-three people, including women and children, were killed and nearly 200 injured when a powerful bomb ripped through a Shia neighbourhood of Quetta city in southwest Pakistan on Saturday, the latest in a string of attacks targeting the minority community.
The blast occurred at Kirani Road in Hazara Town, a suburb of Quetta with a large Shia population that has been targeted by terrorists in the past.
The area was crowded at the time of the blast.
The bomb was hidden in a vehicle and triggered by a remote control, DIG Wazir Khan Nasir told reporters. He said the Shia Hazara community was the target of the attack....
Over 60 killed, 200 injured in blast in Pak's Quetta
Image: A man grieves his brother who was killed in a bomb attack in a Shi'ite Muslim area, at a hospital in the Pakistani city of QuettaPhotographs: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters
Officials at the Bolan Medical Complex, Civil Hospital and a military hospital said 63 people had died and about 200 injured were being treated.
Several women and children were among the dead. The death toll could rise as some of the wounded were in a serious condition, officials said.
Officials said the vehicle with the bomb was parked near the pillar of a building in a market. The building collapsed due to the intensity of blast and several persons were trapped in the debris.
An estimated 100 kg of explosives was used in the attack, officials said.
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Over 60 killed, 200 injured in blast in Pak's Quetta
Image: A foot is seen under a blanket at a hospital after the bomb attack in QuettaPhotographs: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters
Footage on television showed several buildings were reduced to piles of rubble by the blast that was heard all over Quetta, the capital of the restive Balochistan province.
Several shops and vehicles were destroyed. Angry people took to the streets and protested against the attack.
The protesters pelted vehicles with stones and prevented rescue workers and police from approaching the site of the blast for some time. They also blocked roads and fired in the air.
Security forces cordoned off the area and did not allow the media to approach the site of the blast. Officials said this was done as terrorists had set off a bigger bomb after a smaller initial blast in recent attacks.
No group claimed responsibility for the blast.
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Over 60 killed, 200 injured in blast in Pak's Quetta
Image: Schoolbags and a shoes are seen of a girl who was killed in the bomb attackPhotographs: Naseer Ahmed/Reuters
Similar attacks in the recent past have been blamed on the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a notorious militant group that often targets Shias.
On January 10, a twin suicide attack in Quetta killed 92 Hazara Shias and injured over 100, the highest toll in a single attack on Shias, who make up 20 per cent of Pakistan's population of 180 million. Following the attack, the federal government imposed governor's Rule in Balochistan.
Shia groups and political parties asked people to observe three days of mourning and called for a strike in Quetta on Sunday to protest the killing of members of the minority community.
Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf condemned the attack and reiterated the government's resolve to continue the fight against militants.
Ashraf directed provincial authorities to arrest the perpetrators of the blast. "We will not be intimidated by such cowardly acts and such acts will not deter our resolve to fight terrorism," he said.
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