Headlines
Pakistan church bombings kill 15; trigger violence
Islamabad, March 15
Two powerful explosions
rocked two churches in Pakistan's Lahore city on Sunday killing at least
15 people and triggering violence, media said.
Jamatul Ahrar, an offshoot of the Tehreek-e-Taliban, claimed responsibility for the deadly attack, news web sites said.
At
least 78 people were hurt in the explosions at the Catholic Church and
Christ Church in the city's Youhanabad area, home to the country's
biggest Christian population.
The condition of 30 of the injured was stated to be critical, media reports said.
A
large crowd was already in the area to attend the Sunday prayers and
violent protests erupted in the area immediately following the blasts.
Television
footage showed dozens of stick-wielding men, mostly belonging to the
Christian community, ransacking the metro bus terminal in the city, Dawn
online reported.
Enraged protestors held four injured policemen
captive at a shop after the blast for allegedly watching a cricket match
instead of performing their duties at the time of the bomb attack.
Witnesses
said suicide bombers were responsible for the explosions but police
have not confirmed this, a BBC report said, adding that the bombers are
said to have detonated their explosives at the gates of the churches.
According
to the report in Dawn online, Rana Mashood, a government spokesperson,
said the government was determined to tackle the issue of militancy and
added that "terrorists will be brought to justice".
He said they were not looking at the event as an attack on a particular community or members of one religion.
"We
are not separated by religion, this is an attack on Pakistan, and we
feel their pain," the media report quoted Punjab education minister Mian
Mujtuba Shuja-ur-Rehman as saying.
Sunday's attack is the worst
on the community since 2013, when twin suicide attacks at the All
Saint's Church in Peshawar's Kohati Gate area killed 80 people and
wounded over 100 others.
Meanwhile, missionary schools in Karachi and across Punjab will remain closed on Monday in protest against the attack.
President Mamnoon Hussain and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif have strongly condemned the blasts.
Islamabad, March 15
Two powerful explosions
rocked two churches in Pakistan's Lahore city on Sunday killing at least
14 people and triggering violence in which protestors took to the
streets and ransacked a bus terminal, media said.
Jamatul Ahrar,
an offshoot of the Tehreek-e-Taliban, claimed responsibility for the
deadly attack, news web sites said. Doctors in hospitals where those
killed and wounded were rushed to said 14 people were dead.
At least 78 people were wounded in the explosions in Youhanabad area, home to the country's biggest Christian population.
Hundreds were attending Sunday prayers at the Roman Catholic Church and the Christ Church when the explosions occurred.
Television
footage showed dozens of stick-wielding men, mostly belonging to the
Christian community, later ransacking the metro bus terminal in the
city, Dawn online reported.
Enraged protestors held four injured
policemen captive at a shop after the blast for allegedly watching a
cricket match instead of performing their duties at the time of the bomb
attack.
A local leader of the Christian community said both blasts took place at the church-entrances, according to the media report.
"Had
the attackers managed to enter the churches, the casualty figure would
have soared as there were hundreds of people present at the place of
worship at the time of attack," he was quoted as saying.
The community leader also accused the Punjab government of incompetence and blamed it for the attack.
Earlier, Jamatul Ahrar spokesperson Ehsanullah Ehsan claimed responsibility for the attacks, the report said.
Initial reports said a man, allegedly involved in the attack, was beaten to death by an enraged mob.
Other reports suggested that two suicide bombers carried out the attacks.
In
2013, twin suicide attacks at the All Saint's Church in Peshawar's
Kohati Gate area killed 80 people and wounded over 100 others.