Seven policemen among the dead in Quetta

Bombs killed nearly 30 people in Pakistan on Friday, with a suicide car bomber killing at least 13 in the southwestern city of Quetta, and two blasts later killing at least 15 in the northwest town of Parachinar, officials said.

Seven police officers were killed in the first attack, in Quetta, which happened when police stopped the car to search it at a checkpoint.

Abdul Razzaq Cheema, director general of police in Balochistan province, of which Quetta is capital, told Reuters the bomber had detonated a car packed with explosives.

At least 13 bodies were taken to hospital, along with 19 wounded people, said Wasim Baig, a spokesman for the Civil Hospital in Quetta. Nine security officials were among the wounded, said Fareed Sumalan, a doctor at the hospital.

Jamaat ur Ahrar, a splinter group of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack in a message sent to Reuters by its spokesman, Asad Mansur. “Our attacks will continue until a true sharia system is enforced in Pakistan,” the spokesman said, referring to Islamic law.

In the evening, several hundreds kilometres to the northeast, two blasts went off in the town of Parachinar killing at least 15 people, a government official told Reuters.

Bloody Ramzan

The blasts were in a market and went off within three minutes of each other, senior government official Wazir Khan Wazir said. Parachinar is near the border with Afghanistan.

Many people were at the market buying food for iftar, the evening meal with which Muslims break the daily fast during the holy month of Ramzan, which ends this weekend.

No group claimed responsibility for the Parachinar blasts.

In Balochistan, provincial government spokesman Anwar ul Haq Kakar said the car-bomb blast happened near the office of the inspector general of police. “It’s possible the IG office was the target, or the assailants were trying to enter the cantonment which is close by,” he said. An official said the car contained up to 95 kg of explosives.