HomeAsiaPakistan train bombing kills more than 30 people, official says

Pakistan train bombing kills more than 30 people, official says

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By Saleem Ahmed

ISLAMABAD, May 25 (Reuters) - ‌More than 30 people died in a suicide bombing of ​a train in southwestern Pakistan on Sunday, officials said on Monday, in the latest attack claimed by separatist ⁠Balochistan militants.

Two provincial officials, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to disclose the information, said on Monday the death toll had risen to more ​than 30.

At least 24 people were initially reported as dead on Sunday after a suicide bomber rammed an ‌explosive-laden car into the train.

The car bomb hit a shuttle train carrying Pakistani security personnel and their families in the provincial capital Quetta.

Pakistan's government and military have not released an ⁠official death count from the attack, which was the latest in a ⁠series of strikes on trains, security forces and infrastructure.

The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) claimed the attack and described it as a suicide bombing. Reuters could not independently verify the claim.

The separatist group has been fighting for decades over the exploitation of regional resources in the ‌mineral-rich province, saying that local people are deprived of their due share.

Balochistan, which borders Iran ⁠and Afghanistan, is home to Chinese development projects and the ‌deep-sea Gwadar port.

The train was carrying passengers from Quetta's ​army cantonment area to connect with the Jaffar Express as they travelled to their home towns to celebrate Eid al-Adha, another official said.

The explosion derailed the engine and ‌three coaches, while two coaches overturned, Pakistan's railways ministry said.

Images ​from the scene showed burnt-out vehicles, ⁠overturned bogies, damaged residential buildings, twisted metal and debris scattered near the ‌railway track, with fire and smoke still rising ⁠from the wreckage.

In March last year, BLA militants hijacked the Jaffar Express carrying army soldiers, and took hundreds hostage before a military operation ended the day-long standoff, which resulted in ​the killing of 21 hostages, ‌four troops and all 33 attackers.

Earlier this year, Pakistani forces said they killed 145 militants ⁠after the group carried out coordinated attacks ​across the province, killing nearly 50 people.

(Reporting by Saleem Ahmed in Quetta; Writing ​by Asif Shahzad; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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