Hazara Shiite community following the funeral victim bomb blast in Quetta, Pakistan, Monday (14/1). (REUTERS/Naseer Ahmed)
Quetta, Pakistan (Reuters)-officials denouncing the security forces of Pakistan province on Sunday after the bombing of the Shia Hazara community, killing 80 people in the Northwest of the town, Quetta.
"The terrorist attacks on the Shia Hazara community in Quetta is password and security failure," said Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, Governor of the province of Baluchistan, when organizing the hospital.
"We give freedom to the security to act against the terrorists and the Group hard, but Quetta incident happened," he said.
The number who perished as a result of the bombing on Saturday night rose to 80 people, with most of the victims were in the city's main bazaar, the capital of Baluchistan, near the border with Afghanistan.
Most of the dead were citizens of Hazara, Shia tribal groups. High security officials said that number could rise as 20 people were seriously injured.
The Pakistani Government, which is not favored over various issues, such as poverty and electricity outages, ahead of the election predicted in the coming months, increasingly hard pressed to pursue Sunni pegaris, who consider Shiites not a Muslim.
A spokesman for Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), Sunni, claimed responsibility for the bomb in Quetta, which is also causing casualties near the school and the computer center.
LeJ also stated was behind bombings in the past month in Quetta, which killed almost 100 people, one of the worst school attack in Pakistan.
Shia political institutions called for a strike in Quetta to denounce the latest massacre. Many shops and bazaars are closed. Relatives who were injured responding to a request by the hospital's blood.
Officials said Pakistan hard group password command bombings and shootings increase LeJ against Shiites to spark violence, which will pave the way for a Sunni theocracy in Pakistan, an ally of United States.
More than 400 people dead in Pakistan's Shiites in the past year, many of them by gunmen or bomb. Some hard-line Shiite group retaliated by killing Sunni clerics.
The split with Sunni Shia evolved after the Prophet Muhammad died in 632, when his followers disagree over his successor.
(B002/AK)
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