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Suicide bomber kills 30 mourners at funeral of Pakistan police officer

August 08, 2013 05:25 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 09:33 pm IST - QUETTA

Pakistani investigators collect evidence at the site of a suicide bomb attack in Quetta, Pakistan, on Thursday, during a funeral for a policeman in which 30 people were killed.

A suicide bomber blew himself up at a police officer’s funeral in southwestern Pakistan on Thursday, killing 30 people gathered to mourn a man shot dead earlier that day in front of his children, authorities said.

The bombing is one of the more audacious assaults in a series of attacks targeting security forces in Pakistan, where insurgent Pakistani Taliban fighters routinely kill woefully under-equipped police officers.

The funeral was being held in an open field outside a mosque in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province. Some 250 people gathered for the service.

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Fayaz Sumbal, the head of police operations in Baluchistan, noticed the bomber near the gate of the mosque before he detonated his explosives, police official Mohammed Aslam said. Mr. Sumbal called on officers to question the bomber, who then blew himself up, Mr. Aslam said. Mr. Sumbal died in the blast.

Most of the dead and injured were police officers, Mr. Aslam said. They had gathered for the funeral of an officer gunned down earlier in the day as he travelled through the city in a vehicle with his children, city police chief Mir Zubair Mehmood said. Two of his children were injured in the attack.

Provincial police chief Mushtaq Sukhaira said the attack could not deter the resolve of the police in the fight against terrorism. He said 21 police officers and nine civilians were killed in the attack.

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A police constable, Hassan Jan, said he saw bodies of his fellow officers and colleagues after the blast.

“I am very sad for those who lost their lives in today’s suicide attack,” he said.

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on Islamic militants based in the province. Baluchistan is also home to separatists who have been waging a low-level insurgency against the governments for decades, but they rarely carry out suicide bombings.

The bombing comes after a massive jailbreak in July orchestrated by Taliban fighters that authorities had prior warning about, but still couldn’t stop.

The attack also came a day before Muslims in Pakistan were to start celebrating the Eid al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of fasting month of Ramadan. Millions of muslims elsewhere in the world began celebrating Eid on Thursday but Pakistan and some other nations start on Friday.

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