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Asia: Attack in a mosque in Pakistan: the death toll rises to 89

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AsiaPakistani mosque attack: death toll rises to 89

A mosque bombing inside the police headquarters in Peshawar, northwest Pakistan, has killed 89 people, hospital officials said on Tuesday.

Most of the victims are police officers. No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack.

AFP

Bodies continued to be pulled from the rubble on Tuesday after a bomb attack on a mosque inside the police headquarters in Peshawar, northwest Pakistan, left nearly 90 people dead, in majority of the police, and 150 injured.

The explosion occurred Monday, at noon prayer time, in this extremely sensitive place in the city, located about fifty kilometers from the border with Afghanistan and where the security situation has deteriorated. these last months.

Nearly 90% of the dead are police officers

Peshawar police chief Muhammad Ijaz Khan told AFP the death toll had risen to 89 after “six more patients succumbed to their injuries”. About 150 people were injured. Nearly 90% of the dead are police officers, said Ijaz Khan, without being able to give an exact count yet.

“This morning we are going to remove the last part of the collapsed roof so we can recover more bodies. But we are pessimistic about our chances of finding other survivors,” Bilal Ahmad Faizi, a spokesman for the 1122 emergency number, told AFP.

“I got trapped under the debris”

During the night, at least nine bodies were discovered in the rubble of the mosque, whose roof and a wall collapsed under the effect of the blast of the explosion. “I was trapped under the debris with the body of a dead man on top of me for seven hours. I had lost all hope of surviving,” Wajahat Ali, a 23-year-old police officer, told AFP on Thursday.

At least 20 police officers were buried Monday evening in a ceremony with a guard of honor, their coffins lined up and girded with the Pakistani flag, a police official told AFP.

Deterioration of security

Pakistan has been facing deteriorating security for some months, especially since the Taliban took power in Afghanistan in August 2021. After several years of relative calm, the attacks have resumed with a vengeance, led by the Pakistani Taliban of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), EI-K, the regional branch of the jihadist group Islamic State (IS) , or Baloch separatist groups.

Analysts believe these groups have been emboldened by the success of the Taliban. Pakistan accuses them of letting some of these groups use their Afghan soil to plan their attacks, which Kabul continues to deny. The TTP, a movement separate from that of the new Afghan leaders but which shares common roots with it, denied being responsible for Monday’s attack.

“I saw black smoke rising in the sky”

The police headquarters in Peshawar is one of the best policed ​​areas in the city. It also houses the premises of various intelligence agencies. Shahid Ali, a 47-year-old policeman who survived the attack, told AFP the detonation came seconds after the imam began the prayer. “I saw black smoke rising in the sky. I ran outside to save my life,” he said. “The screams of people still echo in my head. They were screaming for help.

The capital and the rest of the country, particularly on the border with Afghanistan, have been placed under even heightened security alert. “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.”

In New York, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres denounced an “abject” attack against “a place of worship”.

(AFP)

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