Three days of mourning have been announced in the Pakistani province of Balochistan after a series of blasts in the provincial capital Quetta.
Three days of mourning have been announced in the Pakistani province of Balochistan after a series of blasts in the provincial capital Quetta.Most of the casualties were from twin blasts at a snooker hall which killed 81 people and injured more than 120.Earlier, a bomb in a market area killed 11 people and injured 27 more.The bombed area is predominantly Shia Muslim, and the Sunni extremist group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi said it had carried out the attack.Many of the casualties at the snooker hall were caused by the second blast as police and media rushed to the scene. "The second blast was a deafening one, and I fell down. I could hear cries and minutes later I saw ambulances taking the injured to the hospital,” local resident Ghulam Abbas told the Associated Press.A spokesman for another militant group, the United Baloch Army, said it had carried out the earlier attack.Balochistan is plagued by both a separatist rebellion and sectarian infighting between Sunnis and Shias.The Taliban and armed groups that support them also carry out attacks in the province, particularly in areas near the Afghan border. Pakistan’s military has been engaged in a long-running battle against those militant groups.Media deaths A senior police officer, Hamid Shakil, told AFP news agency that a bomb exploded outside the snooker hall building on Alamdar Road and that the second blast occurred 10 minutes later as rescue workers, police and media arrived.The first blast appeared to have been carried out by a suicide bomber on foot, police said, while the second was a car bombing.The dead included at least two members of a media team and four workers from a private rescue organisation, the Edhi Foundation. At least five policemen also died.Home Secretary Akbar Durrani told AFP the bombings were in an area dominated by the minority Shia Muslim community.Mr Shakil said that many of the dead and wounded were Shia, adding that the death toll could rise.Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which is a banned organisation, said it had carried out the attack.The BBC’s M Ilyas Khan in Islamabad says the group has in the past targeted the area’s ethnic Hazara Shia.A senior government official told the BBC he believed the bombings were the group’s reaction to two incidents on Wednesday - the shooting of Sunni cleric and the seizure of arms and ammunition from a suspected Lashkar-e-Jhangvi hideout.TV footage of the earlier market attack showed survivors picking through debris, and emergency crews taking away the wounded.