The device went off outside the shrine of Ahmed Sultan popularly known as Sakhi Sarwar in Dera Ghazi Khan district, local administration chief Iftikhar Sahu said. -- PHOTO: AFP
DERA GHAZI KHAN (Pakistan) - THE death toll rose to 50 on Monday after two suicide bombers unleashed carnage at a Sufi shrine in Pakistan where hundreds had gathered for a religious ceremony, officials said.
The bombers on Sunday struck the shrine of 13th century Sufi saint Ahmed Sultan, popularly known as Sakhi Sarwar, in Dera Ghazi Khan district of Punjab province, about 480km south-west of the capital Islamabad.
'We had 44 dead in our hospital. Six people died on the spot and their families took their bodies directly,' said Tariq Mehmood, an emergency ward official at Civil Hospital in Dera Ghazi Khan.
Local police officer Zahid Hussain Shah confirmed a death toll of 49. 'Most of the bodies have been identified and sent to their home towns for burial,' Mr Shah told AFP. It was the deadliest suicide attack in Pakistan since a mosque bombing killed 68 people on November 5 in the north-west area of Darra Adam Khel.
Islamist militants have increasingly targeted Sufi worshippers, who follow a mystical strain of Islam, in Muslim-majority Pakistan. Dera Ghazi Khan is close to the tribal area which is known as a hub of Taleban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants. The rugged tribal region is described by Washington as the most dangerous place on Earth and an Al-Qaeda headquarters.
More than 4,200 people have been killed across Pakistan in attacks blamed on homegrown Taleban and other Islamist extremist networks since government troops stormed a radical mosque in Islamabad in July 2007. -- AFP
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