The bombing kills at least 12 in the northwest of Pakistan, they say that the police | News of the conflict
Jaish al-Fursan, a group associated with Pakistani Taliban, took responsibility for the attack.
At least 12 people were killed after an attack on bombing at security instance in Pakistani northwestern border province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, police said the hospital official.
Two attackers pulled two vehicles with explosives into a wall of a buning wall in Bannu, and the other attackers broke out of the place before they were refused, said a security official who requested anonymity for Associated Press News Agency.
Muhammad Noman, a spokesman for Bann District Hospital, said that 12 people were killed in the attack and 30 wounded, adding that all civilians were caught under the demolished buildings and walls.
At least seven children were among the killed, he showed a hospital list.
A group associated with Pakistani Talibani took responsibility for the attack and said dozens of members of Pakistani security forces were killed. There was no direct comment from the army regarding any victims.
A police official speaking on the condition of anonymity told the AFP news agency that six attackers had been killed in a “fire exchange” after the attack.
The explosions, he said, created “two four -meter craters” and were so strong that at least eight houses in the area were damaged.
Jaish al-Fursan has taken responsibility for the attack, the third attack in Pakistan since Ramadan started on Sunday. In a statement, the group said the source of the explosion was driving with explosives.
But Amin Gandapur, Chief Minister of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, condemned the incident and said he had sought a report of senior police officials in the explosion.
The attack comes for days after the suicide bomber killed six people in the Islamic religious school in Pakistan, attended by key leaders of Taliban in the same province.
Last year, he was the most deadly in the decade for Pakistan, with an increase in attacks in which more than 1,600 people were killed, according to the Islamabad analysis group of research and security studies.
Islamabad accuses Kabul’s rulers of failing to use the shelter fighters at Afghan soil as they prepare to set up an attack on Pakistan, which is an accusation that the Taliban government denies.