Pakistan election: At least 128 people killed in suicide bombing

Escalating tensions over return of former prime minister Nawaz Sharif ignite violence

Hospital staff treat people injured in a bomb blast, at a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan. Photograph: Arshad Butt/AP
Hospital staff treat people injured in a bomb blast, at a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan. Photograph: Arshad Butt/AP

A suicide bomb attack has killed at least 128 people at an election rally in Pakistan on Friday.

The attack occured amid growing tensions over ousted prime minister Nawaz Sharif’s return ahead of the July 25th vote. The bombing was the most deadly attack in Pakistan in over three years and is the third incident of election-related violence this week.

It came as Pakistan’s caretaker government launched a crackdown on political gatherings. Mr Sharif, who was ousted by the Supreme Court last year and convicted in absentia of corruption a week ago, arrived in the country to rally his party ahead of the general elections.

Baluchistan home minister Agha Omer Bangulzai said the death toll in the attack stood at 128 people, with more than 150 wounded.

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Aftermath at the bomb blast site. Photograph: Banaras Khan/AFP/Getty Images
Aftermath at the bomb blast site. Photograph: Banaras Khan/AFP/Getty Images

Senior police official Qaim Lashari had earlier said that more than 1,000 people were in attendance at the rally in the town of Mastung in the violence-plagued province of Baluchistan.

Islamist militants linked to the Taliban, al Qaeda and Islamic State have been operating in the province, which borders Iran as well as Afghanistan. It also has an indigenous ethnic Baluch insurgency fighting the central government.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack, said the group’s Amaq news agency. The group provided no further detail or evidence for its claim.

Among those killed in Friday’s attack was Baluchistan provincial assembly candidate Siraj Raisani, whose brother Nawab Aslam Raisani had served as the provincial chief minister from 2008 to 2013.

“My brother Siraj Raisani has been martyred,” said Haji Lashkari Raisani, another brother who is also contesting a national assembly seat from Baluchistan.

People gather at the bomb blast site in Pakistan’s restive Balochistan province. Photograph: Banaras Khan/AFP/GettyImages
People gather at the bomb blast site in Pakistan’s restive Balochistan province. Photograph: Banaras Khan/AFP/GettyImages

Earlier in the day, a bomb blast killed four people in the northern town of Bannu when it struck the campaign convoy of Akram Khan Durrani, an ally of Sharif’s party from the religious Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal party (MMA).

A suicide bomber blew himself up at a rally by an anti-Taliban political party in the northern city of Peshawar on Tuesday, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province killing 20 people including Haroon Bilour who was hoping to win a provincial assembly seat in July.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for the attack.

Bilour was part of the predominantly secular, ethnic Pashtun nationalist Awami National Party, which has long competed with Islamist parties for votes in Pakistan’s volatile Pashtun lands, along the border with Afghanistan.

His father, senior ANP leader Bashir Bilour, was killed in a suicide bombing in late 2012, in the run-up to Pakistan’s last election. – Reuters