Pakistan: At least 61 dead in explosion inside mosque

At least 61 people were killed and around 150 injured, mostly police officers, in an alleged attack on Monday at a mosque inside the police headquarters in Peshawar, northwest Pakistan

Pakistan: At least 61 dead in explosion inside mosque

At least 61 people were killed and around 150 injured, mostly police officers, in an alleged attack on Monday at a mosque inside the police headquarters in Peshawar, northwest Pakistan. The explosion occurred at the time of prayer in this extremely sensitive place in the city, located about fifty kilometers from the border with Afghanistan. She pushed the government to place the whole country on high alert.

A rescue operation was immediately launched to free the people trapped from the rubble, the roof and a wall of the building having collapsed under the blast of the explosion. "A lot of policemen are buried under the debris," Peshawar police chief Muhammad Ijaz Khan told AFP, saying that 300 to 400 people are usually present inside the mosque at the time of the day. prayer. The balance sheet should therefore increase further. “So far, we have recovered 61 bodies and 60 injured people are receiving medical treatment. Dozens of other injured people were taken to other hospitals in the city,” Muhammad Asim Khan, spokesman for Lady Reading Hospital, told AFP.

The latter announced that the death toll, previously 33, had risen to 47 and at least 150 wounded, before the balance sheet was adjusted to 61 dead. An AFP reporter saw bloodied wounded being taken out of the damaged building and the bodies of apparently dead people being taken away in ambulances. The police headquarters in Peshawar is one of the best policed ​​areas in the city. It also houses the premises of various intelligence agencies. According to the police, the explosion occurred in the second row of worshipers gathered for prayer. Bomb squads were on hand to examine the possibility that it was caused by a suicide bomber.

The UN Secretary General was quick to react, explaining that he "strongly condemns the suicide bombing" of the "despicable" bomb in a place of worship, said his spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric.

The capital and the rest of the country, particularly on the border with Afghanistan, have been placed under even heightened security alert. In Islamabad, snipers were positioned on some buildings and at entry points to the city. "The terrorists want to create panic by targeting those who are fulfilling their duty to defend Pakistan," Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said in a statement. “Those who fight Pakistan will be wiped off the face of the earth. »

Shahid Ali, a 47-year-old policeman who survived the blast, told AFP the detonation came seconds after the imam began praying. "I saw black smoke rising in the sky. I ran outside for my life,” he said. "People's screams still ring in my head. They were screaming for help. »

This incident took place on the same day that the President of the United Arab Emirates, Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, was due to pay an official visit to Islamabad. This was canceled at the last moment on Monday, officially due to rainy weather.

Pakistan is also due to receive a visit from a delegation from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday to try to negotiate the release of vital financial aid for its dying economy. In March 2022, a suicide attack claimed by EI-K, the regional branch of the jihadist group Islamic State (IS), in a Shiite mosque in Peshawar killed 64 people. It was the deadliest attack in Pakistan since 2018.

According to the police, the suicide bomber was an Afghan national living in Pakistan with his family for several years, who had prepared the attack in Afghanistan. Peshawar was ravaged by near-daily attacks during the first half of the 2010s, but security there had improved greatly in recent years.

In recent months, the city has mostly seen targeted attacks aimed primarily at security forces. Pakistan has been facing for some months, especially since the Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August 2021, a deterioration of security. After several years of relative calm, the attacks have resumed with renewed vigour, led by the Pakistani Taliban of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), the EI-K or Baloch separatist groups.

Pakistan accuses the Taliban of letting these groups use Afghan soil to plan their attacks, which Kabul has repeatedly denied. The TTP, a movement distinct from that of the new Afghan leaders but which shares common roots with it, has claimed responsibility for several attacks in recent months. One of his worst atrocities, which left a lasting mark on Pakistan's national consciousness, was the massacre of around 150 people, mostly schoolchildren, in Peshawar in December 2014.