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Muslim Shrine Blast Kills Dozens In Shah Noorani, Pakistan

The explosion took place while hundreds of people were inside, authorities say.
Pakistani women mourn relatives outside of a mortuary in Karachi on Saturday following a suicide bombing at a Sufi shrine.
RIZWAN TABASSUM via Getty Images
Pakistani women mourn relatives outside of a mortuary in Karachi on Saturday following a suicide bombing at a Sufi shrine.
Pakistani women mourn relatives outside of a mortuary in Karachi on Saturday following a suicide bombing at a Sufi shrine.
RIZWAN TABASSUM via Getty Images
Pakistani women mourn relatives outside of a mortuary in Karachi on Saturday following a suicide bombing at a Sufi shrine.

QUETTA, Pakistan (Reuters) - An explosion claimed by militant group Islamic State ripped through a Muslim shrine in southwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing at least 43 people and wounding scores, officials said.

The blast at Shah Noorani shrine occurred while hundreds of people were inside, local district commissioner Hashim Ghalzai told Reuters.

Provincial Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti said 43 people were killed and Ghalzai said more than 100 were wounded.

“Every day, around sunset, there is a dhamaal (ritual dance) here, and there are large numbers of people who come for this,” said Nawaz Ali, the shrine’s custodian.

The shrine is located in Baluchistan province about 100 km (60 miles) north of the port city of Karachi, to where rescue official Hakeem Nasi told Geo TV dozens of wounded were being moved.

The government dispatched 25 ambulances from the nearby town of Hub to the shrine, said Akbar Harifal, provincial home secretary for Baluchistan. The army was called in to assist with rescue operations, given the remoteness of the site, Bugti said.

It was not clear if the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber or a planted device, according to Bugti.

The province has seen some of the worst militant attacks this year in Pakistan.

Islamic State said in a statement via its Amaq news agency that its fighters had carried out Saturday’s bombing.

The jihadist group also claimed responsibility for the last major attack in the province, at a police academy last month, that killed around 60 people.

Muslim shrines have often been targeted by militant groups, many of whom adhere to a strict interpretation of Islam that regards veneration of saints at shrines such as Shah Noorani as heresy.

Baluchistan is also a key link in a $46 billion transport and trade corridor between Pakistan and China, which hinges on a deep-water port in the southwestern city of Gwadar.

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