- Title: Injured in Pakistan suicide attack that killed at least five brought to hospital.
- Date: 21st February 2017
- Summary: CHARSADDA, PAKISTAN (FEBRUARY 21, 2017) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF SECURITY AT BLAST SITE RESCUE WORKERS AND SECURITY PERSONNEL STANDING BY BODY LYING ON THE GROUND CAP AND SHOE LYING BESIDE BODY CHARSADDA, PAKISTAN (FEBRUARY 21, 2017) (ORIGINALLY 4:3) (REUTERS) BLOOD ON THE GROUND INVESTIGATORS WALKING PAST SHOPS DAMAGED BY BLASTS VARIOUS OF SHOP DAMAGED BY BLAST SLIPPER LYING
- Embargoed: 7th March 2017 11:11
- Keywords: blast bomb attack hospital injured dead Pakistan
- Location: CHARSADDA , PAKISTAN
- City: CHARSADDA , PAKISTAN
- Country: Pakistan
- Topics: Bombing (non-military),Conflicts/War/Peace
- Reuters ID: LVA00164GR0P1
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THIS EDIT CONTAINS CONVERTED 4:3 MATERIAL
Suicide bombers attacked a court complex in Pakistan on Tuesday (February 21), killing five people and wounding 20, police officials said, the latest incident in a new surge of Islamist violence.
All three of the attackers were carrying hand grenades and AK-47 assault rifles, Ijaz Khan, police chief in the northwestern district of Charsadda, told Reuters.
One attacker blew himself up outside the court, while two were killed by policemen before they could enter the building.
District Police Office Charsadda Sohail Khalid told reporters there was a security threat against courts in the province.
"This was a sensitive area. Courts all over the district, all over the province, had been put on high alert. Today we had made extra deployment at all sensitive places, especially at courts. We had put up road blocks, and were carrying out search operations in the surrounding areas," he said.
He said five people were killed in the attack.
Besides lawyers and judges, hundreds of litigants visit the building every day.
A spokesman for Jamaat-ur-Ahrar, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement emailed to media.
Last week, the militant faction released a video announcing a new campaign of attacks against the government, including the judiciary, police and the army.
A series of bombings last week, in which more than 100 people were killed, has shattered a nascent sense that the worst of the country's militant violence might be in the past.
The deadliest of last week's attacks was on a famous Sufi Muslim shrine in the southern province of Sindh and was claimed by the Middle-Eastern militant group Islamic State.
Islamic State has a small but increasingly prominent presence in Pakistan.
Fighters loyal to it are known to be operating under different names in Pakistan to attack the government, army and members of religious minorities.
Most of the other recent attacks have been claimed by factions of the Pakistani Taliban, which is waging its own fight against the government but whose ranks have also cooperated with, and sometimes defected to, Islamic State.
Television footage showed wounded people being taken to hospital. Provincial health officials said the critically wounded would be treated at a major hospital in Peshawar, about 30 km (20 miles) from Charsadda. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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