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Twin suicide attacks underline the depth of Pakistan’s crisis

The scenes of horror pictured on Friday have become all too familiar in Pakistan. This time it was a twin attack. A procession to mark the birthday of the prophet Muhammad and a police station were both targeted by suicide bombers, killing almost 60 people and injuring hundreds more.

No one has yet claimed responsibility, but suspicion among officials and analysts was directed towards Islamic State – Khorasan (IS-K), which has recently regrouped and revived its militant activities in Pakistan to devastating effect, and with little sign of being contained. Alongside a recent resurgence of its rival, the Pakistan Taliban, which has been behind dozens of deadly attacks over the past few months, the country’s security situation continues to deteriorate to its worst in years.

kinther ,
@kinther@lemmy.world avatar

Wow, I had no idea shit was going downhill so quickly in Pakistan. Since they do have nuclear weapons this is a scary situation for everyone.

autotldr Bot ,

This is the best summary I could come up with:


No one has yet claimed responsibility, but suspicion among officials and analysts was directed towards Islamic State – Khorasan (IS-K), which has recently regrouped and revived its militant activities in Pakistan to devastating effect, and with little sign of being contained.

Alongside a recent resurgence of its rival, the Pakistan Taliban, which has been behind dozens of deadly attacks over the past few months, the country’s security situation continues to deteriorate to its worst in years.

IS-K claimed responsibility for the suicide bombing of a political rally in July that targeted a party known for its close ties to the Taliban in Afghanistan, killing 54 people.

IS-K has positioned itself as an Islamist group even more hardline than the Taliban, and has targeted its rival in both Afghanistan and Pakistan for not enforcing sharia law strictly enough.

A powerless caretaker government is running the country, its most popular political leader, Khan, is behind bars and the date of the general election has continually been pushed back.

The anticipated return of the former prime minister Nawaz Sharif in October from the UK, where he had been hiding for the past three years – ostensibly for medical treatment but in reality to avoid jail – is only likely to deepen the political turmoil.


The original article contains 699 words, the summary contains 211 words. Saved 70%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

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