Peshawar reels from suicide bombing

Police have taken two suspects into custody on suspicion of having links to the suicide bomber

PESHAWAR:

A pall of gloom gripped the northwestern city of Peshawar, which borders neighbouring Afghanistan, as thousands gathered to attend mass funerals for victims of Friday's suicide bombing of a Shia mosque that killed 62 worshippers and injured nearly 200.

In the attack, a lone suicide bomber shot the police guards at the entrance to a packed mosque at Peshawar's historic Qissa Khwani Bazar before detonating his explosives-laden vest in the middle of worshippers offering Friday prayers.

The bombing followed a string of similar incidents in war-torn Afghanistan, whose border lies just about an hour away, where several Shia mosques were targeted after the Taliban took control of the country last August.

With damp eyes, thousands of mourners gathered near the site of the bombing to attend mass funerals for 10 victims of the terrorist attack, with many wailing as they moved the coffins from ambulances to the funeral site.

Volunteers carried coffins draped in white sheets and covered with flowers to the funeral site, one after another, as mourners loudly recited verses from the Quran.

Shopping malls, markets, and shops remained shuttered in several areas to mourn the deaths as police and paramilitary troops patrolled the city.

According to a spokesman for Lady Reading hospital, some 50 people injured by the blast are still being treated for moderate to severe injuries, while another 144 have been discharged.

The police have taken two suspects into custody on suspicion of having links to the suicide bomber.

Quoting security sources, local media reported that the terrorist group Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the deadly attack.

The latest attack has stoked fears of terrorism returning to Peshawar, capital of the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, which after being a longtime hotbed of terrorism has been peaceful over the past several years amid improving security in the South Asian country.

Unfazed by the attack, the Australian cricket team, visiting Pakistan for the first time in 24 years, continued to play a test match in the garrison city of Rawalpindi, just some 145 kilometers (90 miles) from Peshawar.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Imran Khan said that Islamabad is fully aware of the motives and perpetrators of the bombing, but did not name any group.

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