Gulf Today

Police detain 23 suspects after deadly mosque blast

-

PESHAWAR: Police in Peshawar city have detained 23 people in connection to a blast at a mosque inside a police headquarte­rs that killed 101 people, a senior official who asked not to be named said on Wednesday.

Authoritie­s are also probing the possibilit­y that people inside the compound helped to coordinate the attack, the senior provincial police official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

A suicide bomber slipped undetected into a highly sensitive compound in Peshawar and detonated explosives among a row of worshipper­s in the compound’s mosque on Monday, causing a wall to collapse and crush officers.

“We have detained people from the police line (headquarte­rs) to get to the botom of how the explosive material made its way in and to see if any police officials were also involved in the atack,” the senior official said. “The atacker and facilitato­rs might have had links outside Pakistan.”

He said some among the 23 detained were also from the city and nearby former tribal areas which border Afghanista­n.

Authoritie­s are investigat­ing how a major security breach could happen in one of the most tightly controlled areas of the city, housing intelligen­ce and counter-terrorism bureaus, and next door to the regional secretaria­t.

The assaults are claimed mostly by the Pakistani Taliban, as well as the local chapter of Daesh group, but mass casualty atacks remain rare.

Moazzam Jah Ansari, the head of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province police force, on Tuesday told reporters that a suicide bomber had entered the mosque as a guest, using 10-12 kilogramme­s of explosive material earlier brought to the site in bits and pieces.

He added that a militant group that was on-and-off affiliated with the Pakistani Taliban could be behind the atack.

“The main fear is a second atack, another blast ... a suicide bomber may blow himself in a market,” said 55-year-old Naeemullah Jan, a building contractor in the city.

Police have said the mosque blast was a revenge atack against the police force who are on the frontline fighting a resurgence in militancy since the Afghan Taliban came to power across the border.

“Earlier I used to feel safe near the police, now when a police car or officers pass near me, I fear in my heart that they might be attacked and I will also be hurt,” 55-year-old Muhammad Haneef Awan told AFP from a market in Peshawar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain