Four suspects in mosque bombing arrested


Silent grief: A mourner weeping during the funeral of Shiite Muslims, a day after a suicide bombing at a mosque in Islamabad. — AFP

SECURITY forces raided multiple locations and arrested four suspects, including the alle­ged mastermind, behind a suicide bombing at a Shiite mosque on the outskirts of the capital that killed 31 people, the interior minister said.

The announcement by Mohsin Naqvi came a day after a regional affiliate of the Islamic State group, identifying itself as Islamic State in Pakistan, claimed responsibility in a statement carried by its Amaq News Agency.

The statement said the attacker on Friday opened fire on security guards who tried to stop him at the main gate before detonating his explosive vest after reaching the mosque’s inner gate.

The IS group suggested it view­ed the Pakistani Shiites as legitimate targets, calling them a “human reservoir” that provided recruits to Shiite militias fighting IS in Syria.

Friday’s mosque bombing that also wounded 169 people was the deadliest in Islamabad since a 2008 suicide bombing at the Marriott Hotel that killed 63 people and wounded more than 250.

In November, a suicide bomber struck outside a court in the capital, killing 12 people.

Naqvi described the suspected mastermind of the bombing as an Afghan linked to IS. He alleged the attack was planned and the bomber trained in Afghanistan with financial backing from India – claims for which he provided no immediate evidence.

There was no immediate comment from New Delhi and Kabul.

Naqvi also alleged that several militant groups were operating from the Afghan territory to launch attacks against Pakistan and urged the international community to take notice, warning that instability could spread beyond the region.

Addressing public concerns about security lapses, he said, “If one blast happens, 99 others are being foiled as well”.

Earlier, more than 2,000 grief- stricken mourners gathered as coffins of those killed were brought to the same mosque for funerals of about a dozen victims, joined by Shiite community leaders and senior government officials.

Funerals of other victims were to be held in their hometowns.

IS is a Sunni group that has targeted Pakistan’s Shiite minority in the past, apparently seeking to stoke sectarian divisions in the majority Sunni country. In 2022, it claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing that struck a Shiite Mus­lim mosque in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar, killing at least 56 and wounding 194.

Pakistan’s Defence Minister Khawaja Mohammad Asif told reporters that the attack signalled that Pakistan-based militants operating from Afghanistan could strike even in the capital. His remarks drew a sharp res­ponse from Afghanistan’s Tali­ban government.

Afghanistan’s Defence Ministry condemned the mosque attack in Islamabad but said the Pakistani defence minister had “irresponsibly” linked it to Afghanistan.

Pakistan has frequ­ently accused Afghanistan, where the Taliban returned to power in August 2021, of harbouring militants, including members of the Pakistani Taliban.

Kabul denies the accusations.

The attack drew condemnation from the wider international community, including the United States, Russia and the European Union.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said international support remained critical to Pakis­tan’s counterterrorism efforts and vowed the perpetrators would be brought to justice. — AP

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