Rescue workers inspected the wreckage of a bus
involved in a bomb blast on Friday in Peshawar, Pakistan.
The bus, carrying employees of the Peshawar Civil Secretariat, was
passing through Charsadda district, 10 miles north of the city, said the
city commissioner, Sahibzada Mohammad Anis.
Mr. Anis, the city commissioner, said the explosion appeared to have
been caused by either a magnetic bomb or a device that had been placed
inside the bus.
The bombing came less than a week after a suicide attack on a Christian
church in Peshawar killed 85 people, triggering angry street
demonstrations by Christians across Pakistan.
A Taliban splinter group claimed responsibility for that attack, saying
it was in retaliation for American drone strikes in the nearby tribal
belt. It also stoked the political debate about the wisdom of opening
peace talks with the Taliban, which Imran Khan, the politician whose
party runs Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Province, where Peshawar is located, has
long advocated.
Mr. Khan’s administration is coming under pressure for its failure to
prevent recent Taliban attacks in the province, including a jailbreak in
which hundreds of prisoners escaped.
“The police do not have the capacity to check everything,” the newly
posted provincial police chief, Nasir Durrani, said Friday at the scene
of the bombing.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, who is in New York, has said that militants
must lay down their arms and recognize Pakistan’s Constitution before
talks can take place.