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Terrorists Kill 8, Wound 136 in 'Cowardly' Attack on Islamic School

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A powerful bomb blast ripped through an Islamic school on the outskirts of the northwest Pakistani city of Peshawar on Tuesday morning, killing at least eight students and wounding 136 others, police and a hospital spokesman said.

The bombing happened as a prominent religious scholar was delivering a lecture on the teachings of Islam in the main hall of the Jamia Zubairia madrassa, according to police officer Waqar Azim.

He said initial investigations suggest the bomb went off minutes after someone left a bag at the school.

TV footage showed the hall was littered with broken glass and its carpet was stained with blood. Police said at least 11 pounds of explosives were used in the attack.

Several of the wounded students were in critical condition, and hospital authorities feared the death toll could climb further.

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Authorities said some teachers and employees were also wounded in the bombing.

Some Afghan students studying at the school were also among the wounded, officials said.

Police initially said the bombing killed and wounded children studying at the school but later revised their account to say that the students were in their mid-20s.

Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan condemned the bombing and asked authorities to ensure the best possible medical aid to the victims.

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“I want to assure my nation we will ensure the terrorists responsible for this cowardly barbaric attack are brought to justice,” Khan said.

The bombing drew condemnation from the country’s opposition party, which has been holding rallies meant to force Khan’s government to quit.

The United Nations’ children’s agency, UNICEF, also condemned the attack. In a statement, its representative in Pakistan, Aida​ Girma, said “education is the fundamental right of every girl and boy, everywhere. Schools must never be targeted.”

From his hospital bed, a wounded student, Mohammad Saqib, 24, said religious scholar Rahimullah Haqqani was speaking when suddenly they heard a deafening sound and then cries and saw blood-stained students crying for help.

“Someone helped me and put me in an ambulance and I was brought to hospital,” he said. Saqib had bandages on both arms but was listed in stable condition.

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Another witness, Saeed Ullah, 24, said up to 500 students were present in the school’s main hall at the time of the explosion.

A video filmed by a student at the scene showed the Islamic scholar Haqqani delivering a lecture when the bomb exploded. It was unclear whether the teacher was among the wounded.

Mohammad Asim, a spokesman for the Lady Reading Hospital, said eight students died and they received dozens of wounded people, mostly students.

The attack comes days after Pakistani intelligence warned that Islamic militants could target public places and important buildings, including schools and mosques across Pakistan.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack in Peshawar, which is the capital of Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan.

The province has been the scene of militant attacks in recent years.

The latest attack comes two days after a bombing in the southwestern city of Quetta killed three people.

The Pakistani Taliban have been targeting public places, schools, mosques and the military across the country since 2001, when the Islamic nation joined the U.S.-led war on terror following the Sept. 11 attacks in the United States.

Since then, the insurgents have declared war on the government of Pakistan and have carried out numerous attacks, including a brutal assault on an army-run school in the city of Peshawar in 2014 that killed 140 children and several teachers.

Mohammad Khurasani, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, condemned Tuesday’s bombing. In a statement, he described the attack as a cowardly act, claiming that the country’s institutions were behind it.


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