Thousands bury Karachi bomb victims

Thousands bury Karachi bomb victims
The bomb exploded in Abbas Town as worshippers came out of mosques, ripping through two apartment blocks, setting one of them on fire and trapping people beneath piles of rubble. Survivors are being housed temporarily in schools.
There has been no claim of responsibility, but suspicion will likely fall on banned Sunni extremist organisation Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which has claimed major attacks on Shiites in the city of Quetta, and on the Pakistani Taliban.
Thousands of mourners, including women and children, many of them wearing black bands around their heads, beat their chests and heads and sobbed as eight coffins passed by at the start of the first funeral, an AFP reporter said.
Traffic was thin as educational institutions, businesses and markets closed after the local government announced one day of mourning and Shiite groups three days of mourning for those killed in Sunday's bombing.
At least 4,000 people turned out for the funerals, police officers estimated.
Karachi is Pakistan's largest city and business hub, contributing 42 percent of GDP, 70 percent of income tax revenue and 62 percent of sales tax revenue.
But the city is plagued by sectarian, ethnic and political violence, which last year killed more than 2,200 people and which routinely forces closures.
Rights groups have strongly criticised the government for failing to stop sectarian murders and bombings and bring to justice those responsible.
"Terrorists are killing us but the government is not taking any action to eliminate them," said Mohsin Ali, 29, a Shiite whose elder brother was killed.
"How long will we keep losing our children, our relatives?"
Survivors could be seen searching for personal items and belongings such as jewellery from the rubble of their apartments.
"The government should provide us with arms to deal with terrorists if their agencies are unable to bring them to book," said Azam Khan, a Sunni Muslim, who said he had taken several of the dead to hospital.
"We will vote for those who eliminate these terrorists. We are not ready to be hoodwinked by empty slogans any more."
Officials said around 150 people were also wounded. Although Abbas Town is a mainly Shiite neighbourhood, officials said some Sunnis were among the dead.
So far hospitals have released only 13 bodies for burial with the rest yet to be formally identified, officials said.
Pakistan's parliament is due to dissolve in two weeks in preparation for elections. But rising violence against Shiites, who make up around 20 percent of the 180 million population, has raised serious questions about security.
"The unfortunate reality is that things could take a turn for the worse as tensions increase ahead of the approaching general elections," newspaper The News wrote in an editorial on Monday.
Last year was the deadliest on record for Shiites in Pakistan with more than 400 killed, according to Human Rights Watch.
The Supreme Court ordered the authorities to come up with a strategy to protect Shiites after bomb attacks in the southwest on January 10 and February 16 killed nearly 200 people.
Police on February 22 detained Lashkar-e-Jhangvi leader Malik Ishaq for 30 days under a law intended to maintain public order.
He was detained briefly in 2012 for inciting sectarian hatred, having been released on bail in 2011 despite being implicated in dozens of murders.
The Pakistani Taliban have also increased attacks in recent months, leading to fears they could disrupt the election scheduled to take place by mid-May.
Last month the group proposed talks with Islamabad. But the government insists the militants must declare a ceasefire before coming to the negotiating table -- a condition they have rejected.
MORE REGIONAL NEWS
- Chinese authorities detain gay rights protester
- Drug traffickers targeting Australia
- Majority reject Japan mayor on comfort women: poll
- India's 'new generation' of filmmakers feted at Cannes
- New Zealand media slam 'meek surrender' at Lord's
- McCullum backs batsmen after 'hour of madness'
- South Korea's Bae captures first US PGA title
- Myanmar leader heads to White House
- In symbolic landmark, Myanmar leader heads to White House
- Zhang, Wang in final as Li wins women's gold
- Li wins world title, completes grand slam
- Thousands in Taiwan rally against nuclear power
- Thailand's Red Shirts mark deadly crackdown
- Visiting Chinese PM vows to build trust with India
- China, India PMs to discuss border dispute, trade
Latest Photo Galleries on xinmsn
NEWS VIDEOS
MORE NEWS VIDEOS
facebook recommendations
LIVE NEWS RADIO STREAMING

938LIVE is Singapore's only English news and talk station which transmits round the clock with an engaging and enticing spread of programmes on current affairs, health, business and lifestyle as well as news every half hour until midnight.

95.8FM城市频道的前身是"第三广播网"。上个世纪30年代末,新加坡就有中文广播,一路走来经过不少政治,社会局势的改变,中文广播在本地一直扮演举足轻重的角色。
sitemap
- Entertainment
- Asia Celeb News
- Hollywood Buzz
- Korean Buzz
- Celeb Interviews
- Celeb Bios
- Celeb Blogs
- Photo Galleries
- Music Reviews
- Movies
- xinFirst Webisodes
- TV Channels
- Channel 5
- Channel 8
- Channel U
- okto
- Suria
- Vasantham
- Radio
- 938LIVE
- 987FM
- Class 95FM
- Gold 90.5FM
- Lush 99.5FM
- Symphony 92.4FM
- Capital 95.8FM
- Love 97.2FM
- Y.E.S. 93.3FM
- Ria 89.7FM
- Warna 94.2FM
- Oli 96.8FM
- XFM 96.3FM
- Lifestyle
- Beauty & Fashion
- Food
- Going Out
- Health
- Relationships
- Travel
- Work Life
- Style
- Style:Men
- Style:Weddings
- Style:Living
- i-Weekly i周刊
- 8 DAYS
- Timepieces
- FHM
- Manja
- Mother & Baby
- Elle
- Postbox
- News
- Singapore
- World
- Regional
- Sci-Tech
- Weird
- Business
- News Videos
- Sports
- Local Sports
- BPL
- World Football
- Formula One
- NBA















