Gas cylinder blast on Pakistan school bus kills 17
25 May AFP
At least 17 children were burned to death in eastern Pakistan on
Saturday when a faulty gas cylinder exploded on the bus taking them to
school, police said. Police officer Mohammed Rasheed said seven children
were also injured in the explosion on the outskirts of the city of
Gujrat.
“This is a very sad incident. According to our information, at least
17 children were burned to death,” he said. “The school bus caught fire
after the blast. We have transported all the victims to a nearby
hospital.”
Gujrat is about 200 kilometres (120 miles) southeast of the capital,
Islamabad. The accident comes after a pair of suspected militant attacks
killed nine people in two different areas of northwest Pakistan on
Friday.
In the deadlier of the two attacks, suspected militants armed with
heavy weapons attacked a police convoy in Mattani, 20 kilometers (12
miles) south of the main northwest city of Peshawar, killing six
policemen and wounding seven others, said senior police officer
Shafiullah Khan.
In the second attack on Friday, a suicide bomber walked up to a
vehicle owned by an Afghan religious leader in Peshawar and set off his
explosives, killing three people, said police officer Riaz Ali Shah.
The leader, Haji Hayatullah, was not harmed in the attack because he
was in a nearby mosque attending Friday prayers. Hayatullah's driver and
guard were killed, said Shah. A passerby was also killed and two others
were wounded, said Peshawar police chief Liaquat Ali Khan. There are
more than 1 million refugees in Pakistan from neighboring Afghanistan.
No one has claimed responsibility for the attacks.
- The Jakarta Post
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