KARACHI, Pakistan, May 30, 2005

5 Dead In Pakistan Mosque Bombing

Police Say More Than A Dozen Wounded In Suicide Attack In Karachi

  • Vehicles and buildings burn after a crowd outraged by a suicide bombing attack at a Shiite mosque went on the rampage in Karachi, Pakistan Monday, May 30, 2005.

    Vehicles and buildings burn after a crowd outraged by a suicide bombing attack at a Shiite mosque went on the rampage in Karachi, Pakistan Monday, May 30, 2005.  (AP)

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(AP)  A suicide bomber who blew himself up during evening prayers at a Shiite mosque in the southern Pakistani city of Karachi, killed one worshipper and wounded 20 after a gunbattle outside that left another attacker and two police officers dead.

A crowd outraged by the attack went on a rampage afterward in this southern city, burning cars and shops nearby. Eight people were injured.

The attack on Monday occurred at the Madinatul Ilm Imambargah in eastern Karachi, said Asif Ijaz, a Karachi police official. Three attackers stole an automatic weapon from a police guard outside the mosque before shooting him dead, Ijaz said.

Other policemen opened fire, killing one of the attackers and wounding another, and an officer also was killed, he said.

But the third attacker managed to get inside the mosque and detonated a bomb strapped to his body, Ijaz said. One worshipper died and four were seriously hurt, while 16 others were treated for lesser wounds, said Zafar Hussain, an administrator of the mosque.

"It appeared to be a low-intensity bomb because it did not cause major damage," said Mushtaq Shah, chief of police operations in Karachi.

About 1,000 Shiites, many beating their chests in mourning, burned about a dozen vehicles, a restaurant, two gas stations and eight shops near the mosque, Ijaz said. Two electricity transformers were also set on fire, plunging the neighborhood into darkness.

Rauf Siddiqi, home minister of Sindh province, of which Karachi is the capital, condemned the bombing and said security had been put on "high alert."

"These incidents are happening one after the other. We are trying to find a link between them," he told the private Geo television station. "This is a criminal and merciless attack."

The attack came three days after a suspected suicide bomber attacked a Shiite religious gathering during a festival at a shrine near Islamabad, Pakistan's capital, killing about 20 people and injuring dozens.

Political and sectarian violence between radical groups within the majority Sunni and minority Shiite Muslims is common in Karachi.



©MMV, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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