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NewsNovember 13, 2016

QUETTA, Pakistan -- The death toll from a bomb blast Saturday at a Sufi shrine in southwest Pakistan has risen to 50 people with more than 100 wounded, officials said. The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the suicide attack at the shrine of Sufi saint Shah Bilal Noorani in the southwestern province of Baluchistan...

By ABDUL SATTAR ~ Associated Press
Women display missing family members after a bomb blast at a Sufi shrine while they wait outside the emergency ward Saturday of a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan.
Women display missing family members after a bomb blast at a Sufi shrine while they wait outside the emergency ward Saturday of a hospital in Karachi, Pakistan.Fareed Khan ~ Associated Press

QUETTA, Pakistan -- The death toll from a bomb blast Saturday at a Sufi shrine in southwest Pakistan has risen to 50 people with more than 100 wounded, officials said.

The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility for the suicide attack at the shrine of Sufi saint Shah Bilal Noorani in the southwestern province of Baluchistan.

Abdur Rasool, an official at the province's home ministry, said rescuers were taking the wounded to hospitals and the dead to local morgues, but were struggling in the difficult mountainous terrain more than 200 miles south of the provincial capital, Quetta.

The blast targeted worshippers as they were in the throes of their devotional "dhamal" dance, and the courtyard at the time was packed with families, women and children.

The Islamic State group's statement on the IS-affiliated Aamaq news agency said the suicide attack had targeted Shiites.

The shrine is frequented by Pakistan's Sunni Muslim majority and Shiite minority. IS considers all Shiite Muslims heretics.

The blast comes before Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's planned trip to the province today, where he will see off the first Chinese shipping consignment to Africa from Gwadar port.

Baluchistan home minister Sarfaraz Bugti, citing a lack of cellular services in the affected area, said the situation will be much clearer this morning. He said over 500 people were present in the courtyard of the shrine when the blast happened.

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Abdul Hakim Lasi, an official with the Edhi Foundations rescue service, said many of the injured were wounded in a panicked stampede after the blast.

One female witness, who was not identified by name, told the GEO television channel a "big bang" took place in the midst of the dhamal dance in the shrine's courtyard.

"I don't know how I escaped unhurt," she said. "It was like a hell all around."

A doctor at an area hospital told a local television station the number of wounded being brought in had overwhelmed the hospital's capacity.

"We don't have sufficient space so several people were treated outside on the ground," the doctor said, adding, "Several wounded people have lost limbs."

A military statement said four army medical teams and 45 army ambulances had been dispatched to the scene to assist.

Last month IS claimed responsibility for an attack in which three Islamic militants stormed a police academy in Quetta, killing 61 people, mostly cadets and trainees. Later, the banned sectarian militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi claimed joint responsibility.

For over a decade, Baluchistan province has been the scene of a low-intensity insurgency by nationalist and separatist groups demanding a bigger share of regional resources.

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