2004 Multan bombing | |
---|---|
Part of Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | |
Location | Multan District, Punjab, Pakistan |
Date | October 7, 2004 |
Target | Mourners |
Attack type | Car bombing |
Weapons | Car bomb |
Deaths | 40 [1] |
Injured | Nearly 100 |
The 2004 Multan bombing was a car bombing that took place in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan on October 7, 2004. [2] The death toll was reported at 41 [3] and the number of injured was close to 100. [4]
Top leaders of the banned outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan along with Ahl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat [3] had organized a meeting to mourn the death of Amjad Hussain Farooqi. [5] The meeting began on 10:30 pm on Wednesday after Isha prayers, and it ran till 4:15 am on Thursday morning. The bomb blast took place as the people were leaving the meeting venue at Rashidabad neighbourhood.
Ahl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat had gathered a crowd of 2000 [3] for a meeting when the attack happened around 4:30 am. [6] The bomb, according to Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao was remote-controlled and was placed inside of a Suzuki car. [7] Eyewitnesses reported that they heard two blasts with a 20-second interval. Besides killing innocent civilians the bomb also damaged some nearby buildings and left puddles of blood and human flesh scattered around. [2] Two minutes after the first explosion, another blast went off. According to reports this bomb was attached to a motorcycle. [5]
This section needs to be updated.(September 2019) |
After the attack the Pakistani police were deployed to the site amid the attacks from protestors who burned tires, damaged windscreens, and attacked two ambulances. [7] The blast left a one and half foot crater at ground zero. After the blast most of shops in the area closed down and people from started gathering to protest. Some of them pelleted passing vehicles with stones and chanted slogans against the government for failure to provide security to its citizens. [3]
Following the attack, he government of Pakistan temporarily banned all gatherings, barring Friday prayers. [8] The day of the attack, the United States Government put out a statement condemning the attack. [9]
Later on the police arrested Irfan Ali Shah who was eventually found guilty on 40 counts of terrorism for masterminding the double bombing and was sentenced to death in 2006. [4]
2004 Multan bombing | |
---|---|
Part of Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa | |
Location | Multan District, Punjab, Pakistan |
Date | October 7, 2004 |
Target | Mourners |
Attack type | Car bombing |
Weapons | Car bomb |
Deaths | 40 [1] |
Injured | Nearly 100 |
The 2004 Multan bombing was a car bombing that took place in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan on October 7, 2004. [2] The death toll was reported at 41 [3] and the number of injured was close to 100. [4]
Top leaders of the banned outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan along with Ahl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat [3] had organized a meeting to mourn the death of Amjad Hussain Farooqi. [5] The meeting began on 10:30 pm on Wednesday after Isha prayers, and it ran till 4:15 am on Thursday morning. The bomb blast took place as the people were leaving the meeting venue at Rashidabad neighbourhood.
Ahl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat had gathered a crowd of 2000 [3] for a meeting when the attack happened around 4:30 am. [6] The bomb, according to Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao was remote-controlled and was placed inside of a Suzuki car. [7] Eyewitnesses reported that they heard two blasts with a 20-second interval. Besides killing innocent civilians the bomb also damaged some nearby buildings and left puddles of blood and human flesh scattered around. [2] Two minutes after the first explosion, another blast went off. According to reports this bomb was attached to a motorcycle. [5]
This section needs to be updated.(September 2019) |
After the attack the Pakistani police were deployed to the site amid the attacks from protestors who burned tires, damaged windscreens, and attacked two ambulances. [7] The blast left a one and half foot crater at ground zero. After the blast most of shops in the area closed down and people from started gathering to protest. Some of them pelleted passing vehicles with stones and chanted slogans against the government for failure to provide security to its citizens. [3]
Following the attack, he government of Pakistan temporarily banned all gatherings, barring Friday prayers. [8] The day of the attack, the United States Government put out a statement condemning the attack. [9]
Later on the police arrested Irfan Ali Shah who was eventually found guilty on 40 counts of terrorism for masterminding the double bombing and was sentenced to death in 2006. [4]