Pakistan election: 31 killed in suicide blast in Quetta
At least 31 people have been killed and more than 20 injured in a suicide blast outside a polling station in Quetta's Eastern Bypass area of Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said, reports AFP.
Police officials and civilians both are among the dead. Eight of the wounded are in critical condition.
A statement issued by Quetta police said a suicide bomber blew himself up after he was stopped from entering the Tameer-e-Nau Model School, which is serving as a polling station.
“(The bomber) was trying to enter the polling station. When police tried to stop him he blew himself up,” a local administration official in Quetta, Hashim Ghilzai, told AFP. Police officials rushed to the site and launched a probe into the blast.
The explosion occurred outside the school in Quetta's 'sensitive' NA-260 constituency where polling was taking place. A number of target killing incidents and bombings have taken place in this area over the last 15 years.
The blast has left 31 people dead and more than two dozen people injured, Deputy Inspector General (DIG) CTD Aitzaz Ahmed Goraya said quoting the latest figures.
A station house officer (SHO) injured in the attack is in a critical condition, DawnNewsTV reported.
Polling was halted at the school after the blast, but it resumed after a few hours.
The attack was not immediately claimed by any group. An emergency has been imposed at the Civil Hospital.
The blast is the first major terror incident to have occurred since polling kicked off across the country for 2018 general elections.
Earlier in the day, unidentified assailants hurled a hand grenade at a polling station in the village of Koshk, in Khuzdar district. The attack left one policeman dead and three wounded.
Balochistan has been hit by several bombings during the brief but acrimonious election campaign - including a devastating blast claimed by the militant Islamic State group which killed 153 people this month, and was Pakistan's deadliest ever suicide attack.
The military has stationed over 370,000 personnel across the country to ensure security for the election, bolstered by an additional 450,000 police.