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Rediff.com  » News » Blast kills 17 in Pak as Taliban avenge Islamist's execution

Blast kills 17 in Pak as Taliban avenge Islamist's execution

Source: PTI
Last updated on: March 07, 2016 17:29 IST
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A boy injured during a suicide attack inside a district court's compound in Peshawar is being taken to a hospital on Monday. Photograph: Khuram Parvez/Reuters.

At least 17 people were killed and 26 others injured on Monday when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded court in Pakistan's restive northwest, an attack the Taliban said was revenge for the hanging of liberal Punjab province governor Salman Taseer’s Islamist assassin.

The suicide bomber blew himself up inside the district court’s compound in Shabqadar Bazaar of Charsadda district in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa.

At least 17 people, including two policemen, were killed while 26 others were wounded in the attack, district police officer Sohail Khalid said.

The Jamatul Ahrar, a splinter group of the banned Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying that it was carried out to avenge the hanging of Mumtaz Qadri, killer of Taseer.

Qadri was hanged last Tuesday at a Rawalpindi jail after his appeal against the conviction was rejected by the Supreme Court.

Security and emergency teams reached the blast site and sealed the area. A probe was immediately launched into the assault.

Shabqadar tehsil is close to Mohmand tribal region, which is one of seven semi-autonomous tribal regions in the northwest, where Pakistani Taliban and Al Qaeda-linked militants were said to have carved out strongholds.

Shabqadar is some 30 kilometres west of Charsadda, where militants attacked a university on January 20 in an attack that left 21 people, mostly students, dead.

At the time of the explosion, the courts were crowded after a break over the weekend.

The police said the bomber was intercepted but managed to explode his vest wrapped around his body.

Qadri, deputed on the security of Taseer, had killed the governor at a market close to the latter’s house in 2011 in Islamabad for allegedly criticising the controversial blasphemy laws and was convicted the same year.

Qadri’s execution triggered protests by thousands of Islamists who called it a ‘black day’.

Taseer, who died aged 66, had termed the blasphemy regulations, introduced by Pakistan’s military ruler Zia-ul-Haq in 1980s, as ‘black laws’ drawing the ire of extremists.

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