At least 43 people died and scores of others were injured
when a bomb exploded at a remote Sufi shrine in southern Pakistan’s
restive Balochistan province on Saturday, officials said.
The blast hit a crowd of worshippers participating in a
ceremony at the shrine of Sufi saint Shah Noorani in Khuzdar district,
some 760 kilometres (472 miles) south of provincial capital Quetta.
“At least 43 people have been killed and dozens of others
wounded,” Sarfraz Bugti told a press conference in the southwestern port
town of Gwadar, without providing a precise figure for those injured.
A senior police official and a security official confirmed the death toll.
Officials earlier said 25 people had been killed and at least 35 others wounded.
Hakim Lasi, a rescue official with the Edhi Foundation,
Pakistan’s largest welfare organisation, told Geo TV channel the charity
had received reports via wireless radio saying that nearly 100 others
were wounded, including women and children.
Local officials said worshippers were taking part in a
devotional dance session, which is held daily before dusk, when the
blast occurred.
Rescuers were scrambling to reach the shrine, which is located in a remote, mountainous region with limited medical facilities.
Authorities have dispatched ambulances and medical workers from Karachi, a three-hour drive from the blast site.
Up to 600 people were at the shrine at the time of the
attack, according to local official Tariq Mengal, who told Geo TV that
many devotees travelled to the site from Karachi during weekends.
Islamic State (IS) group claimed responsibility for the attack via Amaq, its affiliated news agency.
“35 dead and 95 wounded Shiite visitors in a martyrdom
operation attack by the Islamic State fighter that targeted a shrine in a
city in Balochistan,” the agency said.
The bombing follows the killing of Amjad Sabri, a renowned Sufi singer, by two gunmen in Karachi in June.
Some observers have said that Sabri may have been assassinated because he was a high-profile Sufi.
Sufism, a mystic Islamic order that believes in living
saints, worships through music, and is viewed as heretical by some
hardline groups including the Taliban.
Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has oil and
gas resources but is afflicted by Islamist militancy, sectarian
violence between Sunni and Shiite Muslims and a separatist insurgency.
Local militants claimed to have worked with the Islamic
State group to attack a police academy in Balochistan last month,
killing 61 people in the deadliest assault on a security installation in
Pakistan’s history.
In August, a suicide bombing at a Quetta hospital claimed by
the Islamic State group and a faction of the Pakistani Taliban killed
73 people