Two people killed in magnetic bomb attack in Pakistan’s southwest

Security personnel examine the blast site near a checkpoint in the southwestern city of Quetta, Pakistan, on September 5, 2021. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 March 2023
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Two people killed in magnetic bomb attack in Pakistan’s southwest

  • No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack which took place in Khuzdar
  • Doctors say the attack injured seven people and left one of them in serious condition

QUETTA: Two civilians were killed while seven others injured after a magnetic improvised explosive device (IED) detonated in Balochistan’s Khuzdar district on Tuesday, said a senior police official.

No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack which targeted ordinary people in the restive southwestern province that shares a porous border with Iran and Afghanistan.

“Some unidentified individuals attached a magnetic IED to a private vehicle which exploded in Khuzdar city,” Fahad Khan Khoso, senior superintendent of police deployed in the area, told Arab News. “Two civilians were killed and seven injured in the attack.”

He described the incident as a “targeted attack,” adding the police had increased security in the area to hunt down militants behind the blast.

Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest province in terms of landmass and has witnessed separatist and sectarian violence which has claimed hundreds of lives in the last two decades.

Several armed groups in the region have carried out similar attacks against politicians and tribal elders in the past. Last month, two police officials were killed after a magnetic bomb attached to their car blew up in the same district.

“The government will prevent the conspiracy of terrorists who want to disturb Balochistan's peace and stability,” Chief Minister Mir Abdul Quddus Bizenjo said in a statement.

He asked the authorities to take effective security measures against militant factions operating in Khuzdar while pointing out that the nation would have to unit and collectively fight the menace of militancy.

Tuesday’s attack was the second blast in the province within a span of a few days. Two private guards of a local tribesman, Sardar Khan Rind, were killed in a targeted IED attack in Kachi district on March 12.

The medical superintendent of the District Headquarters Hospital, Dr. Saeed Ahmed, said an injured person had been referred to Karachi since he had received critical wounds.

“Six people had minor injuries while one was brought here in serious condition with major wounds to one of his arms,” he told Arab News. “We shifted him to Karachi since there was no surgeon here who could provide him the required medical treatment.”


Pakistani religious scholars condemn Islamabad mosque blast, call it contrary to Islamic teachings

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Pakistani religious scholars condemn Islamabad mosque blast, call it contrary to Islamic teachings

  • Daesh claimed responsibility for the attack that killed 32 worshippers, injured over 150 others at Imam Bargah Qasr-e-Khadijatul Kubra
  • Religious scholars say the entire nation stands by the government and armed forces in uprooting the menace of militancy from the country

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani religious scholars on Sunday condemned last week’s suicide bombing at a mosque in the federal capital of Islamabad, saying the attack was contrary to Islamic teachings.

At least 32 people were killed and over 150 others sustained injuries in the blast that targeted Imam Bargah Qasr-e-Khadijatul Kubra mosque in the Tarlai Kallan area on Islamabad’s outskirts.

The blast occurred during Friday prayers, when mosques around the country are packed with worshippers, with Daesh saying one of its militants had targeted the congregation by detonating an explosive vest.

Religious scholars, at a meeting presided over by Religious Affairs Minister Sardar Muhammad Yousuf, called for patience, piety and mutual empathy to thwart divisive conspiracies of the enemy.

“The suicide attack during Friday prayers in Islamabad was condemned in the strongest terms,” read a joint statement issued after the meeting. “It was clarified that targeting innocent worshippers in places of worship is entirely contrary to Islamic teachings as well as constitutional and ethical principles.”

Friday’s mosque blast was the deadliest in Islamabad since a 2008 suicide bombing at the Marriott Hotel that killed 63 people and wounded more than 250. In November, a suicide bomber struck outside a court in the capital, killing 12 people.

The latest attack comes as Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s government deals with a surge in militancy across Pakistan.

Religious scholars pledged to play their role in disseminating messages of peace, tolerance and mutual respect to safeguard the younger generation from extremism.

“It was unanimously declared that the entire nation, along with the Ulema and Mashaikh, stands shoulder to shoulder with the Government of Pakistan and the Armed Forces of Pakistan, and is resolute in uprooting the menace of terrorism from its roots,” the joint statement added.