By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Three Children Were Killed in Another
Suicide Blast
Three children were
among at least five people killed when a suicide bomber struck an army school
bus in Pakistan's restive Balochistan province, the military said on Wednesday,
in an attack that Pakistan blamed on Indian proxies.
About 40 students
were on the bus, which was headed to an army-run school, and several sustained
injuries, said Yasir Iqbal, administrator of Khuzdar district, where the
incident took place.
Pakistan's military
and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif swiftly condemned the violence and accused
"Indian terror proxies" of involvement, although they did not share
any evidence linking the attack to New Delhi.
"Planners,
abettors and executors of this cowardly Indian-sponsored attack will be hunted
down and brought to justice," the military's media wing said.
India rejected
Pakistan's accusations.
"To divert
attention from its reputation as the global epicenter of terrorism and to hide
its gross failings, it has become second nature for Pakistan to blame India for
all its internal issues," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
India also declared
an official of the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi persona non grata,
the second such expulsion in a week, for "indulging in
activities not in keeping with his official status."
The Pakistani charge
d'affaires was summoned and given a warning to ensure that Pakistani officials
do not misuse their privileges and status, the ministry added.
People carry pictures
of the children who were killed after a suicide bomber struck an army school
bus in Khuzdar district, as they gather in their memory, in Karachi, Pakistan,
May 21, 2025.
Pakistan's Foreign
Ministry made a similar move early on Thursday as an official of the Indian
High Commission in Islamabad was declared persona non grata, it said in a
statement posted on social media.
The Indian charge
d'affaires was summoned to Pakistan's Foreign Ministry to stress that Indian
officials in Pakistan should not "misuse their privileges and status in
any manner," the statement added.
Tensions remain high
after India and Pakistan agreed to a ceasefire on May 10. Diplomats have warned
that the truce is fragile, following the most dramatic
escalation of
hostilities between the nuclear-armed neighbors in decades.
Both have traded
accusations of supporting militancy on each other's soil - a charge that each
denies. The latest escalation, in which the two countries traded missiles, was
sparked when India accused Pakistan of supporting a militant assault on
tourists in the Indian portion of the contested region of Kashmir. Islamabad
denies any involvement.
In Wednesday's attack
in Balochistan, at least three children and two
adults were killed, the army said. Local television showed images of three dead
girls from middle and high school.
No group immediately
claimed responsibility for the blast, reminiscent of an attack on a military
school in the northern city of Peshawar in 2014 that killed more than 130
children.
That attack was
claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, an ultra-radical Islamist militant
group.
Attacks by separatist
groups in Balochistan
have risen in recent years. In March, the Baloch Liberation Army blew up a
railway track and
took passengers from a train hostage, killing 31 civilians, soldiers, and
staff.
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