Pakistani volunteers carry the body of a blast victim from a Sehwan hospital Friday. |
Islamabad, Pakistan Pakistan's military has launched a crackdown on what it says are terrorists with ties to Afghanistan after a suicide attack on a packed shrine in the southern city of Sehwan killed at least 88 worshipers.
The
number of people injured in Thursday's attack on the famed Lal Shahbaz
Qalandar shrine has climbed to 200, Fazal Pechuho, health secretary for
Pakistan's Sindh province, said Friday
24 were children ages 4 to 8. Another 16 of the victims were
women, according to Dr. Zahid Hussain, a local hospital official.
Thousands
of worshipers, including families with children, had gathered on Thursday
at the more than 800-year-old shrine for the Sufi ritual of Dhamal,
which involves chanting, music and prayer.
The
Islamic State Khorasan, ISIS' affiliate in Afghanistan and Pakistan,
claimed responsibility for the bombing.
In
response, the Pakistani military said it had shut down the border with
Afghanistan, killed more than 100 terrorists and arrested many others
throughout country.
Additionally,
Pakistan demanded that the Afghan government turn over more than 75
people who allegedly planned, directed and supported terrorism across
the border, the military said.
Pakistan
military officials also called Gen. John W. Nicholson, commander of the
American-led international military force in Afghanistan, to request
assistance in the fight against leaders and financiers of terror groups
hiding on the other side of the border.
after the incidents of the Thursday bomb blast, the dead and injured overwhelmed the 100-bed,
Many patients were later transferred to bigger hospitals in other cities of Sindh province, the reporter said.
The Amaq news agency, which is affiliated with ISIS, reported a suicide bomber in an explosives vest carried out the attack.
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif called the attack "brutal."
"I
have directed all the state institutions to mobilize all resources for
rescue and relief after this brutal terror attack on Lal Shahbaz
Qalandar's shrine," Sharif said in a statement.
Search
operations in the Rawalpindi area have been stepped up, according to
Inter-Services Public Relations, or ISPR, the media wing of the Pakistan
armed forces.
Senior law enforcement agency officials also met Friday to assess the security situation and ways to respond to the terror threat.
Senior law enforcement agency officials also met Friday to assess the security situation and ways to respond to the terror threat.
"Security forces and
intelligence outfits have been instructed to further intensify combing
and targeted operations with the aim to eliminate terrorists" an ISPR statement said.
An 'enormous threat'
In a series of tweets,
Pakistani military spokesman Maj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor blamed operatives
from Afghanistan for a recent spate of attacks and urged his country to
remain calm
The office of the
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani said on Twitter that he condemns the
terrorist attack in Pakistan and terms ISIS a common enemy of
Afghanistan and Pakistan."
Sediq Sediqqi, spokesman for
the Afghan Ministry of Interior Affairs, tweeted that the Islamic State
Khorasan poses an "enormous threat" to both the Afghan and Pakistani
people and called for the two countries to work together to eliminate
the extremist group.
The Sehwan attack comes three days after a bomb exploded during a protest in Lahore, killing at least 14 people and injuring 59 more, according to government spokesman Malik Ahmad Khan.
Jamaat-ul-Ahrar,
a splinter group of Pakistan's Tehreek-i Taliban -- also known as the
Pakistani Taliban -- claimed responsibility for Monday's attack
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