Pakistan: At least 50 killed and dozens injured in Mastung blast

Pakistan: At least 50 killed and dozens injured in Mastung blast
News Desk

By News Desk


Published: 30/09/2023

At least 50 people have been killed and more than 50 injured in a suicide attack in Pakistan, police say.

The blast happened near a mosque in the south-western Balochistan province on Friday as people gathered to celebrate the birth of the Prophet Muhammad.

Officials in Balochistan have declared a state of emergency. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

Meanwhile, a separate blast has taken place at a mosque near Peshawar City in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.

Footage from the scene in the Baloch city of Mastung showed injured people being rescued by emergency responders and locals.

“My feet trembled and I was thrown to the ground,” Hazoor Bakhsh, 49, told AFP news agency.

“As the dust settled, I saw people scattered in all directions, some screaming while others called out for help.”

Local hospitals were overwhelmed by the number of casualties and local authorities appealed on social media for blood donations.

Balochistan’s police chief Abdul Khaliq Sheikh confirmed the explosion was a suicide blast. He said a senior police officer was killed while trying to stop the attacker.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Sarfraz Bugti said the blast was a “very heinous act” and condemned what he called “terrorist attacks” in both areas.

Meanwhile a spokesman for Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police said that two suicide bombers and a vehicle full of explosives had been intercepted. One of the bombers had been “neutralised on the gate” when he tried to enter the mosque, located in a police complex in the town of Hangu, he said.

The number of casualties at the mosque in Hangu is not yet known but police say a number of people could be trapped under rubble after the roof collapsed.

Bordering Afghanistan and Iran, Balochistan is Pakistan’s largest province and has frequently been hit by armed fighters including the Tehrik-e Taliban Pakistan (TTP) or the Pakistani Taliban, and the Islamic State group.

Earlier this month, at least eleven people including a prominent Muslim leader were injured in an explosion in the same district.

However, the TTP have denied involvement in Friday’s blast, saying in a statement that such an attack was against its policies.The group also “vehemently condemned” the attack in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, stating that “mosques, schools, and public gatherings are not part of our targets”.

Pakistan’s caretaker Information Minister, Murtaza Solangi, wrote on X that the “very fact that the terrorists chose to target the celebration of the birth of the prophet (PBUH) and the Friday prayer” proved that they “have nothing to do with any religion, ideology and morality”.

The Pakistani state celebrates the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad on the 12th day of the third month in the Islamic calendar.

There is a public holiday, the day begins with gun salutes in Islamabad and provincial capitals and public spaces are decorated with colourful lights.

Scholars from almost all schools of thought agree on celebrating the day. Processions take place, many organised by the Sunni Barelvi school of thought adhered to by a majority in Pakistan.

However some religious movements disagree with holding processions, saying there is no evidence of them taking place during the time of the Prophet and subsequent years.

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