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Death toll in Pakistan mosque bombing climbs to 59

News Desk || risingbd.com

Published: 08:54, 31 January 2023  
Death toll in Pakistan mosque bombing climbs to 59

Authorities raised the death toll to 59 in the suicide bombing of a crowded mosque filled mainly with police officers in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar.

The attack killed at least 59 people and wounded 157, most of them police and other members of the security forces, and was one of the worst strikes ever staged on law enforcement authorities in Pakistan’s history.

The attacker appeared to have passed through several barricades manned by security forces to get into the "Red Zone" compound that houses police and counterterrorism offices in the volatile northwestern city of Peshawar, police said.

"It was a suicide bombing," Peshawar Police Chief Ijaz Khan said. Many of the 170 wounded people were in critical condition, he said.

The death toll rose to 59 after several people succumbed to their wounds, hospital official Mohammad Asim said in a statement.

Twenty-seven of them were police officials, police said.

The bombing happened a day before an International Monetary Fund mission to Islamabad to initiate talks on unlocking funding for the South Asian country's economy, which is enduring a balance of payments crisis.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned the attack.

The bomber detonated his load at the moment hundreds of people lined up to say their prayers, officials said.

"We have found traces of explosives," Khan told reporters, adding that a security lapse had clearly occurred as the bomber had slipped through the most secured area of the compound.

An inquiry was under way into how the attacker breached such an elite security cordon and whether there was any inside help.

Khan said the mosque hall was packed with up to 400 worshippers.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, the worst in Peshawar since March 2022 when an Islamic State suicide bombing killed at least 58 people in a Shiite Muslim mosque during Friday prayers.

Peshawar, which straddles the edge of Pakistan's tribal districts bordering Taliban-ruled Afghanistan, is frequently targeted by Islamist militant groups including Islamic State and the Pakistani Taliban.

Defense Minister Khawaja Asif told Geo TV that the bomber was standing in the first row of worshippers.

"As the prayer leader said, 'Allah is the greatest,' there was a big bang," Mushtaq Khan, a police officer with a head wound, told reporters from his hospital bed. "We couldn't figure out what happened as the bang was deafening. It threw me out of the veranda. The walls and roof fell on me. Thanks to God, He saved me."

The explosion brought down the upper story of the mosque, trapping dozens of worshippers in the rubble. Live TV footage showed rescuers cutting through the collapsed rooftop to make their way down and tend to victims caught in the wreckage.

"We can't say how many are still under it," said provincial Gov. Haji Ghulam Ali.

"The sheer scale of the human tragedy is unimaginable," Sharif said. "This is no less than an attack on Pakistan. The nation is overwhelmed by a deep sense of grief. I have no doubt terrorism is our foremost national security challenge."

Witnesses described chaotic scenes as the police and the rescuers scrambled to rush the wounded to hospitals.

Sharif, who appealed to employees of his party to donate blood at the hospitals, said anyone targeting Muslims during prayer had nothing to do with Islam._Agencies

Dhaka/AI