Pakistan on edge as six killed in fresh Lahore bomb blast

Top Stories

Pakistan on edge as six killed in fresh Lahore bomb blast
Representational Image

Lahore - The cause of the explosion was not immediately clear

By AFP/Reuters

  • Follow us on
  • google-news
  • whatsapp
  • telegram

Published: Thu 23 Feb 2017, 10:20 AM

Last updated: Thu 23 Feb 2017, 4:40 PM

At least six people were killed and 30 injured after a bomb ripped through Pakistan's Lahore Thursday, officials said, the tenth attack in just under a fortnight pointing to a resurgence in Islamist violence.
The blast, the second to hit the provincial capital this month, crumpled cars and sent panic rippling through the city after the wave of attacks across Pakistan killed more than 130 people.

"My God, my God, I saw so many bodies," said Imtiaz Ali, a barber in a Tony & Guy hair salon opposite the blast site in the posh Defence Housing Authority suburb of the city, replete with upscale boutiques and cafes.
The building where the bomb went off was under construction in a market crowded with people, including children, the 34-year-old told AFP.
"When I came out I first just saw smoke and dust... Bikes upturned. Cars destroyed. My own colleague's car windows blown out. My clients' cars blown out. I was close to fainting."
Police and administration officials confirmed it was a bomb attack, as rescuers supplied the casualty toll. No group has immediately claimed responsibility.
Just over an hour later rumours of a second blast in another affluent area nearby sent ambulances racing to the scene, though authorities later said the reports were false.
The panic underscored growing nervousness across the country as a series of assaults shook what had been a growing sense of security during a prolonged lull in violence.
They included a previous bomb blast in Lahore on February 13 which killed 15 people, and a devastating suicide attack at a Sufi shrine in Sindh province that left 90 devotees dead.
The attacks, most of which were claimed by the Daesh group or the Pakistani Taleban, have dented growing optimism over the country's security after it appeared to be making strong gains in its decade-and-a-half long war on militancy.
RELATED:

Watch: 'Suicide bombers killed' after targeting Pak court
Pakistan turns up heat on militants, raids hideouts
Watch: Pakistan shrine bomber bypassed security check
US offers support to Pakistan after terror attacks
Lahore suicide bombing suspects arrested
The emergence of Daesh and a Taleban resurgence would be a major blow to Pakistan. Analysts have said the apparently coordinated nature of the attacks suggested militants were regrouping.
Islamabad launched a crackdown in the wake of the attacks, saying it has killed dozens of "terrorists" in recent days and carried out airstrikes on militant hideouts along the Afghan border.
On Wednesday the military announced a nationwide anti-terrorist operation. Analysts said the military was seeking to limit militants' movements from one place to another.
"This operation will basically target sanctuaries... of militants in Punjab province and restrict their movements," defence analyst and retired general Talat Masood told AFP.
Much of the uptick in security in the past two years has been credited to an earlier military operation targeting militants in Pakistan's tribal areas along the border with Afghanistan, where they had previously operated with impunity.
Pakistan has accused Afghanistan of harbouring the militants who have carried out the most recent attacks. Kabul and Islamabad routinely accuse one another of giving militants safe haven.
Pakistan had vowed to hold the final of its hugely popular Pakistan Super League in Lahore next month despite the surge in violence, promising "head of state level" security for foreign players taking part.
The city, Pakistan's second largest metropolis, was also the scene of an attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team bus in 2009. Pakistan has not hosted high-level visiting teams since then. 

A timeline: Eleven bloody days in Pakistan 

Here is a recap of the incidents which have killed 136 people over the past 11 days:
- At least six people are killed and 30 injured after a blast rips through a building in an upscale shopping area of the eastern city of Lahore. No group has immediately claimed the attack.
- At least seven people are killed when multiple suicide bombers attack a court complex in northern Pakistan. The attack is claimed by the Jamaat-ul-Ahrar (JuA) faction of the Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP), or the Pakistani Taleban.
- At least 90 devotees are killed and hundreds wounded when a devastating bomb detonates in the popular Sufi shrine of Lal Shabaz Qalandar in Sehwan in southern Pakistan. The Daesh group claims the attack.
- Gunmen on motorcycles kill four policemen and a civilian in the northwestern town of Dera Ismail Khan. The attack was claimed by the umbrella TTP.
- An improvised explosive device claimed by JuA hits an army convoy in the restive southwestern province of Balochistan, killing three soldiers and wounding two others.
- A suicide bomber rides a motorcycle into a van carrying judges in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing the van's driver in an attack claimed by the umbrella TTP.
- Two suicide bombers launch an assault on a government compound in the Mohmand tribal region in the northwest, killing five people and wounding seven, with the attack claimed by JuA. Later, a fourth suicide bomber blows himself up as police surround him.
- Fourteen people are killed and 82 injured when a powerful bomb blast tears through Lahore. The attack, apparently targeting police, is claimed by JuA.
- Two members of the bomb disposal squad are killed while defusing a device in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan. No group claims responsibility for the bomb.
- A roadside bomb kills three paramilitary soldiers in a restive northwestern tribal area bordering Afghanistan.


More news from