UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has condemned Friday’s two separate terrorist attacks in Pakistan.
“We very much condemn the terrorist attacks that took place in Pakistan, killing more than 50 people. The people responsible need to be held to account,” said StephaneDujarric, spokesman for the UN chief, when asked for Guterres’ reaction to the attacks.
The fact that these killings took place during religious ceremonies makes them even more heinous. It is even more horrific to target people as they go about a peaceful religious ceremony, said the spokesman.
An explosion that hit a religious gathering in Mastung district of Pakistan’s southwest Balochistan province on Friday left 50 people dead and at least 50 others injured, Pakistani police and health officials said.
The explosion, believed to be a suicide attack, occurred near a mosque when people were gathering to celebrate Eid-e-Milad-un-Nabi, the birthday of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.
In a separate attack on Friday, five people were killed and 10 others injured when a suicide explosion took place inside a mosque in the northwestern province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.
AP reports, the death toll from a bombing in southwestern Pakistan as people celebrated the Prophet Muhammad’s birthday rose to 54 after two critically wounded patients died in hospitals overnight, officials said Saturday.
A suspected suicide bomber or bombers blew themselves up Friday among a crowd in the Mastung district. It was one of the deadliest attacks targeting civilians in Pakistan in months. Nearly 70 people were wounded, including five who remain in very critical condition, authorities said.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attack in Mastung, a district of Baluchistan province. But suspicion is likely to fall on the Islamic State group’s regional affiliate, which has claimed previous deadly bombings around Pakistan.
IS carried out an attack days earlier in the same area after one of its commanders was killed there. Also Friday, a blast ripped through a mosque located on the premises of a police station in Hangu, a district in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, killing at least five people and wounding seven.
Officials said two suicide bombers approached the police station mosque. Guards shot and killed one, but the other managed to reach the mosque and set off explosives. The mud-brick building collapsed with about 40 people inside, officials said.
No arrests have been made in connection with Friday’s bombing in Mastung, according to Jawed Lehri, the police chief for the area. It happened in an open area near a mosque where some 500 faithful were gathered after Friday prayers for a procession to celebrate the birth of the prophet, an observance known as Milad-un-Nabi.
Most of the dead were buried in local graveyards and the remains of others were sent to hometowns, Lehri said. Body parts recovered from the site of bombing are undergoing DNA testing to determine if they belonged to the suspected perpetrator or perpetrators, he said.