Suicide blasts at Sufi shrine in Pakistan kill 41

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Worshippers carry the body of victims from the site of a suicide bomb attack at a Sufi shrine in Dera Ghazi Khan on April 3, 2011. REUTERS/Sheikh Asif Raza

Worshippers carry the body of victims from the site of a suicide bomb attack at a Sufi shrine in Dera Ghazi Khan on April 3, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Sheikh Asif Raza

MULTAN, Pakistan | Sun Apr 3, 2011 7:11pm EDT

MULTAN, Pakistan (Reuters) - Two Taliban suicide bombers caused carnage on Sunday at a Sufi shrine in eastern Pakistan, killing at least 41 people and wounding scores in the latest bloody attack on minority religious groups.

"These were suicide bombings and we arrested an attacker who could not completely detonate the explosives on his body. He was wounded," Zahid Ali, a police officer in Dera Ghazi Khan city where the blasts took place, told Reuters by telephone.

Police said some 65 people were wounded. They said the attackers struck during an annual ceremony for the Sufi saint to whom the shrine is dedicated.

"I was just a few yards away from the place where the blast happened," said witness Faisal Iqbal.

"People started running outside the shrine. Women and children were crying and screaming. It was like hell."

Taliban militants, who follow an austere interpretation of Sunni Islam, condemn other interpretations of Islam as heretical and have launched repeated attacks on the country's Shi'ite, Sufi and Christian minorities. They claimed responsibility for Sunday's suicide bombings.

"Our men carried out these attacks and we will carry out more in retaliation for government operations against our people in the northwest," Taliban spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location.

Last October, a bomb blast at a Sufi shrine in another eastern city, Pak Pattan, killed six people. In July, 42 people were killed in a bomb attack in Pakistan's most important Sufi shrine, in Lahore, the capital of eastern Punjab province.

Many analysts say the attacks are motivated by more than religious hatred, and that militant groups hope by inflaming sectarian tensions they can further destabilise Pakistan and weaken the government's tenuous grip on the country.

(Additional reporting by Kamran Haider and Mubasher Bokhari, writing by Andrew Marshall, editing by Daniel Magnowski)

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Comments (7)
JamVee wrote:
When considering the oft quoted statement, “Islam is a religion of peace”, the contradictory truth keeps raising it’s ugly head. Even with Muslim against Muslim.

Apr 03, 2011 10:54am EDT  --  Report as abuse
Nurmomad wrote:
There was a time in the pre 9/11 era when the people of Pakistan had no idea about what suicide bombing is. The vicious downward spiral has taken lives of thousands of innocent people, who have nothing to do with the larger than life religious and liberal zealots.

Everyday a new tragedy unfolds in our country and every moment we try to console ourselves that soon this will be over. But nothing changes. Nothing.

Apr 03, 2011 2:08pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Frank95054 wrote:
The murder of peoples because of their religion is a violation of the UN Charter on Genocide. When with the Security Council step up and pursue the one who incite these senseless attacks for Genocide? Religious leaders in the Mosques around the world who encourage the murder of innocents based on a different religion need to be brought to justice. The King of Saudi Arabia and his supporters are guilty of supporting Wahhabism, which promotes the Genocide of non-believers. Wake up King. You will be held responsible for your support of Genocide!

Apr 03, 2011 4:37pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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