Quetta: From Wall Street Journal —At
least 23 people were killed Saturday, including 14 female university
students, in twin bomb and gun attacks in the western Pakistani city of
Quetta, officials said.
In an afternoon of mayhem, militants
bombed a bus carrying students from a university. The dead and injured
were taken to a nearby hospital, which was then stormed by gunmen and
suicide bombers, who took hostages, leading to a four-hour siege and
firefight with security forces, before the authorities took control.
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi,
a violent Sunni sectarian organization normally associated with attacks
on the minority Shiite sect of Islam, claimed responsibility. The
group, influenced by al Qaeda, works closely with the Pakistani Taliban.
A
rescue worker and security official collect evidence from a burned bus
at the site of a bomb blast in the western Pakistani city of Quetta on
Saturday.
Quetta is the violence-plagued provincial capital of
Baluchistan. The bus was taking the students home after class. Some
locals said that students from the local Hazara community, who are
Shiite, often rode that bus. The bus was just leaving the university
when an improvised explosive device detonated onboard, said provincial
police chief Mushtaq Sukhera.
Just a smoldering metal skeleton
was left of the bus, television pictures from the scene showed. A few
possessions of the students were found there, including shoes, charred
writing pads carrying the student's notes from classes, identity cards
and a handbag.
The dead and injured were taken to a hospital that
was almost next to the university. There, as relatives and officials
gathered, a suicide bomber exploded his vest inside the building, close
to paramilitary Frontier Corps guards, said Mr. Sukhera. Then, gunfire
started.
"I think it was their trap, that the girls would be
shifted to the nearest hospital, and they would attack there," said Mr.
Sukhera.
There is a large community of ethnic Hazara in Quetta.
They have been the victims of a sustained campaign of violence by
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi that claimed hundreds of lives. The Hazara are also a
minority in neighboring Afghanistan.
Federal Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan said that 35 people were taken hostage in one room at the hospital.
"We were preparing for a commando operation to free them, but, by God's grace, that was not necessary," said Mr. Khan.
Officials
said that 14 were killed in the bus bombing and 19 injured. At the
hospital, a further four nurses, a senior city official and four
paramilitary security personnel were killed. Four police officers were
injured, one critically. In addition, four assailants were killed at the
hospital.
The provincial police chief, Mr. Sukhera, denied that
the attack was sectarian. However, that seemed to be contradicted by the
claim of responsibility, evidence from eyewitnesses and the views of
other officials. Those at the hospital at the time of the assault told
local media that the attackers had said that the Sunnis could leave but
the Shiites had to remain.
Hasil Bizenjo, a senator and a senior
member of the National Party, which is part of the new ruling provincial
coalition government in Baluchistan, said the bus hit in the attack had
changed its route and had previously taken students to the Hazara
enclave in the city.
"Lashkar-e-Jhangvi doesn't claim
responsibility for any attack here unless it is an attack on Shiites,"
said Mr. Bizenjo. The other attacks are usually claimed by the Pakistani
Taliban, he said.
Mr. Bizenjo said that such attacks would
continue unless there was better intelligence, and for that, work by the
military's spy agencies, Inter-Services Intelligence and Military
Intelligence, was needed.
"But there still seems to be some
confusion, some hurdles" in those intelligence agencies targeting the
religious extremists, he said.
Pakistan's military and its
intelligence agencies have long been criticized for their relationship
with some jihadist groups, including sectarian groups. The military
rejects the charges.
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