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Bus explosion in Peshawar kills 17 Pak govt employees, 30 others injured

Last week, 17 people were killed and 31 others injured when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded court in Charsadda district.

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Pakistani security officials search damaged bus after a bomb blast in Peshawar.
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At least 17 Pakistani government employees were killed and over 30 others injured when a powerful bomb ripped through a bus ferrying them to work in this restive city on Wednesday, an attack Taliban said was to avenge death sentences confirmed against 13 militants a day ago. 

The blast occurred this morning as a bomb placed inside the bus exploded when the vehicle packed with government employees reached Peshawar from Mardan. The bomb exploded when the private bus was on Sunehri Masjid Road as it was taking civil secretariat employees for duty.

At least 17 people, including three women, were killed in the blast targeting the bus carrying government officials, according to senior police officials. About 50 people were on board the bus at the time of the explosion, SSP operations Peshawar Abbas Majeed Marwat said. Over 30 people were injured in the blast.

SP Cantt Kashif Zulfiqar said the blast was caused by an improvised explosive device (IED) planted inside the bus. About 8 kg of explosives were used in blast.

A militant group affiliated with the Pakistani Taliban, Lashkar-e-Islam, claimed responsibility, saying it was to avenge the sentencing of 13 militants to death which was confirmed by army chief Raheel Sharif yesterday. The injured were shifted to Lady Reading hospital. The condition of a majority of those injured was stated to be critical. Eight of the injured were admitted in ICU. 

The security forces and police cordoned off the entire area and started a search operation. Fear and panic spread among residents in the wake of the explosion.

"The top part of the bus has blown off and is being cut to pull out the injured," an eyewitness was quoted as saying by The Express Tribune.

Peshawar has seen scores of attacks on civilians as well as law enforcement personnel in the past. The northwestern city is also the home to the XI Corps, an administrative corp of the Pakistan Army, which manages all military activity in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and is currently engaged in a full-blown operation against militants in North Waziristan.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif strongly condemned the attack in Peshawar and expressed grief over the loss of precious lives in the attack. "These cowardly attacks cannot shatter our unflinching resolve against terrorism," Sharif said.

Pakistan Army launched its offensive in the region in 2014 in a bid to wipe out militant bases. Attacks have decreased since the government crackdown after the 2014 Army Public School attack and the Taliban have been squeezed into small pockets of territory. However, militant groups remain able to launch sporadic attacks on security forces and civilian targets.

Last week, 17 people were killed and 31 others injured when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowded court in Shabqadar Bazaar of Charsadda district near here, an attack the Taliban termed as revenge for the execution of the killer of liberal Punjab province governor Salman Taseer. 

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