LAHORE,
Pakistan — Suicide bombers attacked two Christian churches during
Sunday services in the Pakistani city of Lahore, killing at least 12
people and wounding dozens in the latest attack on religious minorities
in the country.
The
attacks occurred in quick succession outside Catholic and Protestant
churches in Youhanabad, one of Pakistan’s biggest Christian
neighborhoods.
A
man rigged with explosives blew himself up outside the main gate of St.
John’s Catholic Church after being prevented from entering by a
security guard, said Haider Ashraf, a senior police officer.
In
the aftermath of the attacks, an enraged crowd lynched two people
suspected of being accomplices in the bombings, one of whom was wrenched
from police custody. Local news outlets reported that the mob set their
dead bodies on fire.
The crowd also prevented the police from entering the scene of the attacks, and angry protests spread across the city.
Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, a splinter faction of the Pakistani Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attack.
Local
television stations broadcast images of wailing and distraught
relatives in hospital corridors. One woman wept hysterically as
relatives tried to calm her.
Pervez
Masih, 45, who was in one of the churches, said the explosion went off
just as the prayer service was concluding. “Afterward people were
running here and there, trying to save their lives,” he said.
Religious
minorities including Shiites, Christians and Ahmadi Muslims have been
under violent attack for years in Pakistan. At least 85 people were
killed in an attack on All Saints Church in Peshawar in September 2013.
been sporadic attacks
But Pakistan has been particularly on edge in recent months since a Taliban assault on a Peshawar school that killed at least 150 people, most of them children.
Nabila
Ghazanfar, a spokeswoman for the Punjab police, said the deaths from
the attack on Sunday included 10 Christians, two police officers
deployed for security outside the churches and the two suspects beaten
to death by the mob, in addition to the two bombers.
Television images showed police officials struggling to keep the angry crowd away from one of the men who was later lynched.
Dr.
Muhammad Saeed, the chief doctor at Lahore General Hospital, where 61
of the wounded were brought, said that many were in critical condition.
Sohail
Johnson, a witness who lives close to the churches, said the Sunday
services were usually attended by more than 1,000 worshipers.
Salman Masood contributed reporting from Islamabad, Pakistan
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