At least 13 people were killed and more than 50 wounded after a suicide bomber yesterday attacked a court in the Pakistani city of Mardan, police said.
The bomber shot his way through the main gate leading to the district court before throwing a hand grenade and detonating his suicide vest among the morning crowds, senior police official Ejaz Khan told reporters.
Rescue workers were picking their way through scattered human remains and blood-stained office equipment and files to collect survivors, witnesses said.
Amir Hussain, president of the Mardan Bar Association, said he was in a room nearby when the bomb detonated.
“There was dust everywhere and people were crying loud with pain,” he said.
His suit drenched in blood, he added: “I started picking up the wounded and putting them in cars to take them to hospital. I did not know if the people I was rescuing were dead or alive.”
Lawyers were being targeted because they are “an important part of democracy and these terrorists are opposed to democracy,” he said. “Our morale is not dented. It is still high.”
Mardan Rescue spokesman Bilal Ahmad Faizi said 12 people had been killed and 54 injured in the attack.
Police official Faisal Shehzad, said the dead included police and lawyers.
Officials said the bomber had up to eight kilograms of explosives packed into his vest.
No group had claimed responsibility for the attack, which came three weeks after a massive suicide blast killed scores of lawyers in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta, in Balochistan.
Friday’s blast came as security forces fended off four suicide bombers who were allegedly trying to attack a Christian colony in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provincial capital of Peshawar, 60km west of Mardan.
Soldiers backed by army helicopters exchanged gunfire with militants in suicide vests who had tried to attack the colony near Warsak Dam, just north of Peshawar, the army said.
All four attackers were killed, along with a guard at the entrance to the colony, the statement said, adding that the situation was “under control.”
Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, a faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the Peshawar attack.
The group has also said it was behind the attack on lawyers in Quetta, which killed 73 people on Aug. 8, as well as the Lahore Easter bombing, which killed 75 people in Pakistan’s deadliest attack this year.
The Pakistani Taliban routinely targets minority groups and perceived soft targets such as courts and schools.
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