Pakistan revenge suicide bombing kills 11, wounds 15
Militant group says attack was revenge for execution of man who killed politician
A suicide bomber attacked the entrance to a court in northwest Pakistan on Monday, killing 11 people, police said.
The blast in the town of Shabqadar wounded another 15 people, said police official Ali Jan Khan. Two policemen and a policewoman were included among the dead, he said.
The attacker tried to enter the court premises, where police stopped him, said another police officer, Saeed Khan Wazir.
The bomber opened fire at the officers and started running toward the courtrooms where a large number of lawyers and their clients were present, he said. A policeman began fighting the attacker, who then detonated his explosives, Wazir said.
A group affiliated with the Pakistani Taliban and calling itself Jamat-ul-Ahrar claimed responsibility.
The local Taliban branch of its allied militant groups has been waging a war against the state for over a decade, killing tens of thousands of people.
The town of Shabqadar is located in the Charsadda district, where four suicide bombers from a Pakistani Taliban-linked group killed 21 students and teachers on Jan. 20.
The town sits on the edge of the Mohmand tribal region bordering Afghanistan, where two Pakistanis working with the U.S. Consulate in the northwestern city of Peshawar were killed by a roadside bomb while on a mission to eradicate drug cultivation on March 1. That attack was also claimed by Jamat-ul-Ahrar.
The court bombing was an attack on the judiciary which gives verdicts against God's divine laws, said Ahrar's spokesman Ahsanullah Ahsan in a statement emailed to an Associated Press reporter.
Jamat-ul-Ahrar says the attack was revenge for the hanging of Mumtaz Qadri, who was convicted of the 2011 killing of a prominent liberal politician who had called for reform of blasphemy laws.