Karachi: At least 61 people, including children, were killed today in a suicide bombing during Friday prayers at a packed minority Shia mosque in Pakistan's Sindh province, the deadliest sectarian attack to hit the country in recent times.
Hadi Bakhsh Zardari, the deputy commissioner of Shikarpur district where the blast hit, gave the death toll and said 31 wounded are still in area hospitals.
The blast targeted a mosque belonging to members of Pakistan's minority Shiite community. It exploded during Friday prayers when the mosque was packed with worshippers.
The Sunni militant group Jundullah claimed responsibility for the attack. Shikarpur in Sindh province is roughly 500 kilometers (310 miles) north of the port city of Karachi.
The roof of a central Shia Muslim Imambargah came down after an explosion in Lakhi Dar area of Shikarpur - around 470 kilometres north of here - when worshippers had assembled for the Friday prayers, burying them.
Many were trapped under the debris and hundreds of people rushed to the scene to dig out survivors.
The explosion was heard several kilometers away. Children are also said to be among the victims. Television footage showed chaotic scenes as people rushed to take the wounded for treatment using cars, motorbikes and rickshaws.
“It was a big explosion inside the Imambargah and was set off with a remote device. The intensity of the blast led to the roof of the make-shift building caving in completely which has led to many deaths,” senior police official Abdullah Mehr said over telephone.
Geo TV quoted DIG Shikarpur Rakhio Mirani as saying that a man brought a device inside the Imambargah and used it to detonate a bomb.The blast is the latest in a rising tide of sectarian violence blighting Pakistan, where radical Sunni Muslim groups often target Shia Muslims, who form about one-fifth of the 180 million-population.
Jundullah militant group took responsibility of the attack.“Our target was the Shia because they are our enemies,” spokesman Fahad Marwat said.
The group last year parted ways with the Taliban and announced allegiance with the Islamic State militant group.
The extremist Sunni groups consider Shia Muslims as heretics. SSP Shikarpur Saqib Ismail Memon told reporters that a large number of victims have been taken out from under the debris.
There was chaos at the site of the blast as the number of people injured were high and they were being shifted to nearby hospitals, senior police official Abdullah Mehr said. But local provincial lawmaker Shehyar Mehr said hospitals in the area did not have the required staff or equipment to deal with such a big emergency.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif condemned the blast and ordered an immediate inquiry.This is Pakistan's bloodiest sectarian attack since January 22 last year in which 24 Shia pilgrims returning from Iran were killed when their bus was bombed in Balochistan. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed the responsibility for that attack.
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