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Pakistan’s prime minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to punish the perpetrators of a bomb attack that killed at least 40 people and injured more than 100 at a political gathering in the country’s north in one of the worst terrorist attacks in recent years.
The bombing on Sunday targeted a rally of the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam (F), a hardline Sunni Muslim party that is part of Pakistan’s ruling coalition. The rally, held to drum up support ahead of elections later this year, took place in the country’s Bajaur district, which borders Afghanistan and has been racked by growing Islamic militancy in recent years.
Sharif late on Sunday called the attack an assault on “the democratic system in Pakistan” and said: “Those responsible will be identified and punished.”
“The Pakistani nation, law enforcement agencies and our protectors will never allow such cowardly tactics of the enemy to succeed,” he added.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, which underscored the deteriorating security situation in Pakistan since the Taliban took power in neighbouring Afghanistan in 2021.
This has led to an increase in cross-border militancy from groups such as the Pakistani Taliban, or TTP, who have waged a brutal campaign against Sharif’s government since a ceasefire with the group ended last year. Recent violence has been concentrated primarily in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the north-western province where Sunday’s attack occurred.
Last week, a police officer died after a suicide attack in the province, and in January, a suicide attack in the provincial capital Peshawar killed more than 100, many of them police personnel.
Police officers in Peshawar said on Monday that early investigations into Sunday’s attack pointed to the potential involvement of a local offshoot of the militant group Isis.
“There is a terror campaign going on against Pakistan,” said Ayaz Amir, a former member of Pakistan’s parliament. “Most of Pakistan’s military presence today is on the eastern border [with India], but the threat is growing on the western border” with Afghanistan, he added.
Analysts have warned that the spate of attacks threatens to undo years of hard-fought gains in public security.
Pakistan suffered heavily during the US war in neighbouring Afghanistan, with tens of thousands killed in attacks involving the TTP and others. In 2014, TTP gunmen killed about 150 people, mostly children, in an assault on a school in Peshawar.
Pakistan’s opposition leader Imran Khan said on Sunday that “Pakistan cannot afford another wave of terrorism” and called for the state to invest more in security.
Khan and Sharif have been engaged in a bitter dispute in the run-up to elections, with analysts warning that the country’s political instability risks exacerbating security issues.