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HomeUncategorizedJamaat-ul-Ahrar affiliate to both IS & Taliban claim responsibility for Quetta hospital...

Jamaat-ul-Ahrar affiliate to both IS & Taliban claim responsibility for Quetta hospital blast

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At least 70 people died when a suicide bomb tore through a crowd of mourners gathered at a Pakistani hospital Monday, in an attack claimed by both the Taliban and Islamic State group.

Pakistan
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif  called for security forces to “decimate” terrorists after the blast at the Civil Hospital in the Balochistan provincial capital Quetta, which also wounded more than 100 people.

The bomber struck a crowd of some 200 people made up mainly of lawyers and journalists that had gathered to mourn the president of the Balochistan Bar Association, who was shot dead on Monday. Bilal Anwar Kasi was attacked by two unidentified gunmen as he left his home for work.

A faction of the Pakistani Taliban, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, claimed responsibility for both the assassination of the lawyer and the blast at the hospital.

A spokesman vowed it would carry out more attacks “until the imposition of an Islamic system in Pakistan”.

Hours later, the Islamic State group also said it was behind the blast, which it claimed killed 200 people, the SITE monitoring agency reported.

Bomb disposal unit Chief Abdul Razzaq informed that it was a suicide attack. “The bomber had strapped some eight kilograms of explosives packed with ball bearings and shrapnel on his body,” he said.

The head of the provincial health department, doctor Masood Nausherwani, gave a death toll of 70, with 112 injured.

A journalist was about 20 metres (70 feet) away when the bomb went off.

“There were huge black clouds and dirt,” he said. “I ran back to the place and saw dead bodies scattered everywhere and many injured people crying. There were pools and pools of blood around and pieces of human bodies and flesh.”

Nurses and lawyers wept as medics from inside the hospital rushed out to help dozens of injured, he said.

Pervez Masi, who was injured by pieces of flying glass, said the blast was so powerful that “we didn’t know what had happened”.

“So many friends were martyred,” he said. “Whoever is doing this is not human, he is a beast and has no humanity.”

‘Particularly appalling’

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the attack, saying it was “particularly appalling” that it targeted mourners at a hospital.

France’s President Francois Hollande denounced the “abominable act”, while the European Union said there was “no justification for such acts of terrorism”.

The US joined the chorus of condemnation, which the State Department said had targeted “two of the most important pillars of every democracy” – the judiciary and the media.

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