World
        

Top News

31 killed, 50 injured in suicide blast in Pakistan

Updated: 2011-09-15 21:16

(Xinhua)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

ISLAMABAD - At least 31 people were killed and some 50 others injured when a suicide bomber hit a pro- government elder's funeral in Pakistan's northwest district of Lower Dir on Thursday, reported local Urdu TV channel DAWN.

The report quoted police sources as saying that a suicide bomber blew himself up among hundreds of people attending the funeral in the Sadberg Village in the Jandol area of Lower Dir District in northwest Pakistan on Thursday afternoon.

The funeral was held for an elder named Malik Sultan in the village which is located close to the Afghanistan border. The people living in the village belong to Mashwani tribe who have always been supporting the government in the fight against the militants.

Many civil militiamen leaders participated in the funeral and the target is obviously them who are leading the local people in the fight against the militants, said the report.

All the injured people have been shifted to the local Timargara hospital following the attack. Hospital sources said that some of the injured people were still in critical condition.

So far there is no further information about the identity of the suicide bomber. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.  

As the village is located in the deep mountainous area far away from anywhere, there is scanty information about the blast details. No footage of the blast scene has been shown by local TV channels.

Both Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani condemned the suicide blast shortly after the incident was reported.

Taliban militants have in the past carried out similar suicide attacks on funerals for pro-government tribal elders and police officers.

In April, a Taliban suicide bomber attacked a funeral for the wife of a pro-government tribal leader near Peshawar and it killed over 30 people and injured many others.

 

E-paper

Way over the moon

High inflation rockets mooncake prices out of orbit for mid-autumn festival

From death matches to child's play
Tomb raiders remain a menace
Kicking for joy

European Edition

Specials

Singing success

Western musicians bring much-needed impetus to live performance industry

Salary bonanza for bosses

Top boss gets 8.78 million euros a year, far more than the State enterprise CEO with highest pay

Kicking for joy

Swedish college student represents China in Taekwondo championships

Sowing the seeds of doubt
Lifting the veil
Exclusive attraction