Dozens dead after mosque attack
At least 59 people were killed in a suicide attack at a mosque in northwestern Pakistan. Around 150 worshippers were injured in the attack on Monday, a hospital spokesman said. Most of the victims were police officers, according to police reports. Many people were still believed to be under the rubble of the building. The explosion occurred during midday prayers in the major city of Peshawar in a high-security zone. The area is home to many police buildings, which also house offices of the intelligence and anti-terrorism task forces.
"I am on the spot here, and rescue work is continuing," said authority representative Shafiullah Khan of the regional administration. "More bodies are being brought out. Currently, our priority is to rescue people buried under rubble."
Police: suicide vest exploded
Authorities assume that the attack was a suicide bombing, but so far no one has claimed responsibility. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif spoke of "terrorism" and strongly condemned the alleged attack. In a statement, Sharif said that those behind the attack "have nothing to do with Islam. According to government and police sources, a suicide vest exploded in the second row as up to 350 worshippers were praying or on their way to prayers at the mosque. The roof and walls of the mosque had partially collapsed. Heavy machinery and firefighters were used to search for survivors in the rubble. Local media reported that police, army and bomb disposal squads were on the scene. In the capital, Islamabad, police issued the highest security alert and said security had been increased at all entrances and exits to the city, the BBC reported.
UN Secretary-General: "Abhorrent".
The United Nations has condemned the attack "in the strongest possible terms." "It is particularly abhorrent that such an attack took place in a place of worship," UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres let it be known. Freedom of religion, belief and the ability to worship in peace are a fundamental human right, he said.
IS attack a year ago
Late last year, the Pakistani Taliban - which operates independently of the Islamist Taliban government in neighboring Afghanistan - called off a cease-fire with the government in Islamabad. Since then, they have claimed several attacks for themselves. In March last year, a suicide bomber from the jihadist militia Islamic State (IS) carried out an attack on a Shiite minority mosque in Peshawar, killing 64 people. It was the most devastating attack in Pakistan since 2018. In Pakistan, the vast majority of the population of more than 230 million men and women are Muslim. Around two million people live in the major city of Peshawar.