The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility Thursday for a
deadly suicide blast at a luxury hotel hosting the Chinese ambassador in the
southwest of the country, as officials raised the death toll to five.
اضافة اعلان
Beijing said it strongly condemned the attack, although the
Taliban said Pakistan security officials were the target of the blast.
The bomber detonated the explosives late Wednesday while
inside a vehicle in the car park of the Serena hotel -- part of a five-star
chain popular with diplomats and aid agencies -- in the city of Quetta, capital
of Balochistan province, police and the interior ministry said.
Pakistan is fighting several low-level insurgencies in the
impoverished province, waged by Islamist, separatist and sectarian groups.
"The suicide bomber hit the security officials exactly
as it was planned," the spokesperson for Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (
TTP)
said in a statement.
The country's interior minister confirmed a suicide bomber
had carried out the attack, as he pinned the blame on a "foreign
hand".
"Our agencies will fight the efforts which are being
made in the neighboring country to reorganize the TTP," said interior
minister
Sheikh Rashid Ahmed.
Pakistan frequently accuses India of using insurgent groups,
including in Afghanistan, as proxy forces to wage an ongoing shadow war between
the arch-rivals.
Describing the blast as a "terrorist attack",
China's foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said in Beijing that the Chinese
delegation was not present when the bomb detonated.
Gu Wenliang, agriculture commissioner at China's embassy in
Pakistan, told the Chinese newspaper Global Times that the bomb had detonated
10 minutes before their expected return.
"I was walking through the car park when I heard a
sudden loud sound and the earth shook under my feet," said Khuda Baksh, a
guard at the hotel.
"Everyone was running for their lives before I lost
consciousness," he told AFP.
For years the TTP unleashed deadly attacks on urban centers
across Pakistan from their bases along the Afghan border, where they provided
shelter to an array of global jihadist groups including Al Qaeda.
But a massive military offensive launched in 2014 largely
destroyed the group's command and control structure, dramatically reducing
insurgent violence throughout Pakistan.
- 'Full alert' -
"We will not allow this monster to re-emerge,"
tweeted Pakistan’s Prime Minister Imran Khan.
"We are on full alert and keeping an eye on all
internal and external threats."
Analysts warn, however, that Pakistan has yet to tackle the
root causes of extremism.
Balochistan is Pakistan's largest and poorest province
despite being rich in natural resources.
Resentment has been fuelled by billions of dollars of
Chinese money flowing into the region through the China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC) -- a key part of China's Belt and Road Initiative -- which
locals say gave them little benefit as most new jobs go to outsiders.
In 2019 gunmen stormed a luxury hotel overlooking a flagship
CPEC project -- the deep-water seaport in Gwadar that gives China strategic
access to the Arabian Sea -- killing at least eight people.
And in June, Baloch insurgents targeted the Pakistan Stock
Exchange, which is partly owned by Chinese companies.
Both attacks were claimed by the Balochistan Liberation
Army.
Wednesday's blast also comes after the radical
anti-blasphemy party, Tehreek-i-Labbaik Pakistan (TLP), held a week of violent
protests calling for the French ambassador to be kicked out of the country.
The TLP has waged a campaign for months after President
Emmanuel Macron defended the right of a satirical magazine to republish
cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed -- an act deemed blasphemous by many
Muslims.
The Pakistani Taliban, though not ideologically linked to
the TLP, published a statement earlier this week supporting the group's
protests.
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