Seven killed as three suicide bombers attack
Pakistan court
TANGI, Pakistan, Feb 21, 2017 (AFP) - At least seven people were killed when multiple Taliban suicide bombers attacked a court complex in northern Pakistan Tuesday, the latest in a series of assaults which have raised fears militants are regrouping.
TANGI, Pakistan, Feb 21, 2017 (AFP) - At least seven people were killed when multiple Taliban suicide bombers attacked a court complex in northern Pakistan Tuesday, the latest in a series of assaults which have raised fears militants are regrouping.
One bomber was briefly
on the loose inside the busy complex in the Tangi area of Charsadda district
but was killed by police some 20 minutes after the attack began, officials said.
A second bomber was
shot dead by security forces and a third died when he detonated his vest
outside the main gates of the facility in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province,
according to police.
The attack was claimed
by the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JuA) faction of the Pakistani Taliban, which carried
out a series of apparently coordinated assaults last week including a powerful
bomb blast in Lahore which killed 14 people.
Earlier this month the
group vowed a fresh offensive on targets in Pakistan including the judiciary.
"So far seven
people have been killed and 15 wounded," Suhail Khalid, district police
chief, told AFP, adding that a lawyer was among the dead.
Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif's office condemned the latest assault.
"We are a
steadfast nation and will not be deterred by such attacks. Our government will
continue to fight against terrorist elements and we will succeed," a
statement said.
- Bloodstained books -
The three attackers
had opened fire on police and thrown grenades as they tried to battle their way
into the complex, Khalid said.
"Bomb disposal
experts told us that each bomber was wearing seven to eight kilogrammes of
explosives," he told reporters.
Hundreds of people
including lawyers, judges and citizens normally attend the court complex.
An AFP reporter at the
scene said the area was littered with human remains, while a pile of law books
stained with blood and riddled with bullets lay strewn outside an office.
Police scoured the
area for evidence as military helicopters whirred overhead. An old man whose
four-year-old grandson died in the attack wept.
Another man who
witnessed the attack, Muhammad Hussain, said he was about to enter the complex
when he heard the blast.
"When I looked up
I saw three armed men, hurling grenades and opening fire," said the
35-year-old civil servant, adding he sought shelter in a nearby police barracks
from where he heard the gunbattle.
"This continued
for some minutes and then I heard another big bang. Some minutes after a
policemen told me that it's all over."
Lawyers and the
judiciary are frequent targets in Pakistan. Among last week's assaults was a
bomb blast targeting a van carrying judges in Peshawar, which killed their
driver.
Last August JuA along
with the Islamic State group claimed a suicide bombing in Quetta that killed 73
people, including many of the southwestern city's legal community.
Police and troops had
been on high alert in Pakistan after last week's wave of attacks, which killed
more than 100 people.
Most, including the
Lahore bomb, were claimed by JuA, a faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan
(TTP, or Pakistani Taliban) group.
But the Islamic State
group claimed the deadliest of last week's assaults, a suicide bomb at a Sufi
shrine in Sindh province on Thursday which killed 90 people and wounded
hundreds.
The emergence of IS
and a TTP resurgence would be a major blow to Pakistan, which had enjoyed a
dramatic improvement in security over the past two years after a military-led
crackdown begun in 2014.
Islamabad launched a
violent crackdown in the wake of the recent attacks, saying it killed dozens of
"terrorists" and carried out strikes on militant hideouts along the
border with Afghanistan. Hundreds of families have been displaced by the firing
on both sides of the border, according to officials.
Last August JuA along
with the Islamic State group claimed a suicide bombing in Quetta that killed 73
people, including many of the southwestern city's legal community.
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