QUETTA,
Pakistan (AP) — Two suicide bombers struck a church in Pakistani on
Sunday, killing nine people and wounding more than 50 others,
authorities said, in the first attack on a church claimed by the
country's Islamic State group affiliate.
Hundreds
of worshippers were attending services ahead of Christmas when the
bombers appeared in the city of Quetta and
clashed with security forces.
One assailant was killed at the church entrance. The other made it
inside, said Sarfaraz Bugti, home minister for the southwestern
Baluchistan province.
Baluchistan
Police Chief Moazzam Ansari praised the response of security forces
guarding the church, saying the attacker who made it inside was wounded
and unable to reach the main building.
"Otherwise the loss of lives could have been much higher," he told reporters.
Quetta Police Chief Abdur Razzaq Cheema said a search was underway for two suspected accomplices who escaped.
Local
television showed ambulances and security patrols racing to the scene
as women and children were being led out of the church's main gate.
The
Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the attack on
their Aamaq news agency, saying two "plungers" from their group had
stormed the church, without providing further details.
It
was the first time the Islamic State group has claimed an attack on a
church in Pakistan, though Muslim extremists have claimed church attacks
in the past. The deadliest example was in September 2013, when twin
suicide bomb blasts killed 85 people in a Peshawar church. In March
2015, two suicide bombers attacked two churches in the eastern city of
Lahore, killing 15 people.
Fifty-seven
people were wounded in the latest attack, including seven who were
listed in critical condition, according to Wasim Baig, a spokesman for
Quetta's main hospital.
A young girl in a white dress sobbed as she recounted the attack to Geo television, saying many people around her were wounded.
Aqil
Anjum, who was shot in his right arm, told The Associated Press he
heard a blast in the middle of the service, followed by heavy gunfire.
"It was chaos. Bullets were hitting people inside the closed hall," he said.
Dozens
of Christians gathered outside a nearby hospital to protest the lack of
security. Pakistan's president and other senior officials condemned the
attack.
___
Associated Press Writer Ishtiaq Mahsud in Dera Ismail Khan contributed to this report.
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