Six killed as bomb targets political party's conference in Quetta

Policemen search for evidence at the site of a bomb blast in Quetta on December 30, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 31 December 2021
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Six killed as bomb targets political party's conference in Quetta

  • Blast targeted Shuhda-e-Islam Conference organized by Jamiyat Ulma-e-Islam Nazaryati political party
  • Pakistan is fighting several low-level insurgencies in the impoverished Balochistan province

QUETTA: A powerful blast rocked Quetta, the capital of Pakistan’s southwestern province of Balochistan, killing six people and injuring over a dozen others on Thursday, hospital officials said. 

Pakistan is fighting several low-level insurgencies in the impoverished province, waged by separatist, sectarian and other radical groups.

Pakistan’s least developed province of Balochistan shares a border with Iran and Afghanistan. The province is also home to Gwadar, where China is involved in the development of a port on the Arabian Sea as part of a $60 billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor.

A spokesperson for Quetta's Civil Hospital, Dr. Waseem Baig, confirmed six deaths in the Thursday evening blast. 

Police said the explosion was triggered by a remotely-controlled explosive device that targeted a religious ceremony, the Shuhda-e-Islam Conference, organized by the Jamiyat Ulma-e-Islam Nazaryati (JUI-N) political party. The blast occurred on Quetta’s famous Jinnah Road, one of the busiest in the provincial capital.

“The explosion targeted the political workers of a religious party when they were coming out from the conference hall,” Deputy Inspector General (DIG) Quetta Fida Hassan told journalists at the blast site. “We had deployed troops for the security of the event ... but unknown persons planted explosive material beneath an electricity pylon which exploded at 9:40pm while the political workers and religious leaders were dispersing after the event.”

“Approximately two kg of explosive material was used in the blast,” the police chief added. 

Injured people were evacuated from the blast site to the Civil Hospital where doctors declared emergency, Dr. Javed Akhtar, medical superintendent at the facility, told Arab News.

Pakistan’s Federal Minister for Interior, Sheikh Rasheed Ahmed, said the blast would be thoroughly investigated. 

“I have asked for the detailed report of the blast from the provincial authorities,” he said. “These cowardly attacks can’t deter the Pakistani nation.” 

The Chief Minister of Balochistan, Mir Abdul Qudus Bizenjo, also condemned the blast and directed authorities to ensure those injured in the attack got proper medical treatment. 

A provincial leader of the JUI-N party, Maulana Abdul Qadir Loni, said the party had repeatedly asked the provincial government for security “but they failed in protecting innocent workers.”

“We have called for a complete shutter down strike across Balochistan against Thursday’s blast on our Shuhda e Islam Conference," he told Arab News, "and we will start province-wide protests."


Pakistan plans Benghazi consulate, lending legitimacy to Libya’s eastern authorities

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Pakistan plans Benghazi consulate, lending legitimacy to Libya’s eastern authorities

  • Libya descended into turmoil after a 2011 NATO-backed uprising toppled Muammar Qaddafi and has been divided into eastern, western authorities
  • The UN-recognized government in Tripoli controls the west, while the Libyan National Army forces based in ‌Benghazi hold ‌the east and the south

KARACHI: Pakistan is in talks to open a consulate ​in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, three sources with knowledge of the matter said, a move that could give a diplomatic boost to eastern authorities in their rivalry with Libya’s west.

Libya descended into turmoil after a 2011 NATO-backed uprising toppled Muammar Qaddafi and has been divided into eastern and western authorities since a 2014 civil war. The UN-recognized government in Tripoli controls the west, while

Libyan National Army leader Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s forces based in ‌Benghazi hold ‌the east and south, including major oilfields.

Islamabad would be ‌joining ⁠a ​small ‌group of countries with a diplomatic presence in Benghazi. Haftar discussed the move with officials during an ongoing visit to Pakistan, the sources said.

Haftar met Pakistan’s army chief on Monday to discuss “professional cooperation,” the Pakistani military said. He was due to sit down with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday, the sources said, declining to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Pakistan’s prime ⁠minister’s office and foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment.

The LNA’s official media page ‌said Haftar and his son Saddam met senior Pakistani ‍army officials “within the framework of strengthening bilateral ‍relations and opening up broader horizons for coordination in areas of common ‍interest.” It did not give further details and Reuters could not immediately reach eastern Libyan authorities for comment.

Pakistan’s air force said in a statement that Saddam Khalifa Haftar met Air Chief Zaheer Ahmed Baber Sidhu to discuss expanding defense cooperation, including joint training, ​with Islamabad reaffirming its support for the “capability development” of the Libyan air force. Pakistan’s army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir visited Benghazi in December, ⁠where he signed a multibillion-dollar defense deal with the LNA, previously reported by Reuters.

All three sources said the decision to open a consulate in Benghazi was linked to the $4 billion defense deal, one of Pakistan’s largest-ever arms sales.

Libya has been under a UN arms embargo since 2011, although UN experts have said it is ineffective. Pakistani officials involved in the December deal said it did not violate UN restrictions. Haftar has historically been an ally of the UAE, which supported him with air power and viewed him as a bulwark against extremists, while Pakistan — the only nuclear-armed Muslim-majority nation — signed a wide-ranging mutual defense pact with Saudi Arabia ‌late last year.