Sunday, March 15, 2015

BREAKING NEWS- Twin bombings at churches in Pakistan kill 14, wound 78

Exterior of church targeted in Lahore
The gates of one of the churches was destroyed in the explosion
Bombs outside two churches in the Pakistani city of Lahore killed 14 people and wounded nearly 80 during Sunday services, and witnesses said quick action by a security guard prevented many more deaths.
A Pakistani Taliban splinter group claimed responsibility.
Islamist militants in Pakistan have attacked Christians and other religious minorities often over the last decade or more.
Many Christians, who make up less than two percent of Pakistan's population of more than 180 million, accuse the government of doing little to protect them, saying politicians are quick to offer condolences after an attack but slow to act to improve security.
Sunday's blasts occurred minutes apart in a majority Christian suburb of the eastern city. Police said it seemed they targeted two churches, one Catholic and one Protestant, that are very close to each other.
After the explosions, enraged residents protested and lynched two suspects, police said.
"I was sitting at a shop near the church when a blast jolted the area. I rushed toward the spot and saw the security guard scuffle with a man who was trying to enter the church. After failing, he blew himself up," said witness Amir Masih.
"I saw his body parts flying through the air."
The guard died as well, he said. It was not clear if the first blast was also triggered by a suicide bomber, Masih said.
Fourteen people were killed and 78 wounded, said Zahid Pervaiz, provincial director of general health.
"The rescue operation is still underway and the death toll may increase," rescue services spokesman Sajjad Hussain said.
The Taliban faction Jamaat-ul-Ahrar claimed responsibility.
Pope Francis told crowds at St. Peter's Square in the Vatican he felt "great pain" over the bomb attacks, departing from scripted remarks in his customary address on Sunday.
"These are Christian churches. Christians are persecuted, our brothers spill their blood simply because they are Christians," the pontiff said.
Following the blast, enraged residents lynched two men they suspected of involvement, a police official said. Journalist Riaz Ahmed said he had seen the two burnt bodies at an intersection.
Protesters also smashed shops and attacked vehicles. Police and several politicians were chased from the scene, residents said.
Pakistan's police are notoriously poorly trained and under-funded while the court system is overburdened with a backlog of more than a million cases.
Lahore is the capital of Punjab, Pakistan's wealthiest and most populous province and the political heartland of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.
The city is considered peaceful compared with many other areas of Pakistan, but violence has been increasing after the government's failed attempts to hold peace talks with the Taliban last year.
After the talks failed, the military launched an offensive in the remote northwestern region of North Waziristan along the Afghan border to push the Taliban from the last major region they controlled.

The military now holds the major urban centers there, but residents say many militants fled before the offensive began and others remain in rural areas.A woman mourns a family member killed in a suicide bombingPakistani women mourn the death of a relative in the church attackA woman mourns a family member killed in a suicide bombingChristians protest in Faisalabad

A large crowd gathered at the scene of the blasts, protesting about the lack of security.
The crowd also attacked two men it accused of involvement in the explosions, killing both of them.
Photographs from the scene showed a crowd setting the men's bodies alight.
Protesters carrying sticks blocked Lahore's Ferozepur Road. Local television pictures showed a bus station being attacked.
'Scuffle at church gate'
Amir Masih, a witness quoted by Reuters news agency, said he had heard an explosion near one of the churches.
"I rushed towards the spot and saw the security guard scuffle with a man who was trying to enter the church," he said.
The man blew himself up after failing to enter the church, Mr Masih told Reuters.
Guard outside Lahore church, 2013
Security has been tightened after past attacks on Pakistan's churches
Pakistani Christians praying at Easter
Pakistan's large Christian minority suffers discrimination as well as militant attacks
Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and President Mamnoon Hussain have condemned the latest bombings.
Tahir Naveed Chaudhary, the chairman of the Pakistan Minorities Alliance, a rights group, said the Lahore attacks highlighted the government's failure to protect minorities.
Pakistan's military last year began an offensive against militant bases in the mountainous north-west, bordering Afghanistan. Offshoots of the Pakistani Taliban have warned of attacks in response.
However, Lahore, the capital of the densely populated Punjab province, has largely escaped militant violence and is seen as a relatively peaceful city.
At least 80 people were killed by bombers at a church in the Pakistani city of Peshawar in 2013, in what is thought to be the deadliest ever attack on the country's Christians.
Christians make up less than 2% of Pakistan's overwhelmingly Muslim population.
Map showing Lahore

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