http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21289738

1 February 2013 Last updated at 12:05 GMT

Pakistan bomb: 21 die in Hangu Shia suicide attack

The BBC's Orla Guerin says Hangu has a "history of sectarian violence'"

At least 21 people have been killed and dozens injured in a suicide bomb
attack outside a Shia mosque in the north-western Pakistani town of Hangu,
reports say.

The attack took place as worshippers were leaving Friday prayers.

The town of Hangu is close to Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal regions,
which have a strong Taliban and al-Qaeda presence.

The town is also known for sectarian violence against Shias.

No group has yet said it carried out the attack.
Shops damaged

Local police chief Mian Mohammad Saeed said the bomb went off at one of the
exits of the Shia mosque leading to the Pat Bazaar.
Continue reading the main
story<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-21289738#story_continues_2>Sunni
and Shia Muslims

   - Muslims are split into two main branches, the Sunnis and Shias
   - The split originates in a dispute soon after the death of the Prophet
   Muhammad over who should lead the Muslim community
   - There are also differences in doctrine, ritual, law, theology and
   religious organisation
   - The great majority of Muslims are Sunnis
   - Pakistan - where Shias are a minority - has a history of sectarian
   bloodshed dating back to the 1980s


   - Pakistan's evolving sectarian
schism<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-12278919>
   - Formidable power of Pakistan's anti-Shia
militants<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20983153>

"It was a suicide attack which targeted Shias but Sunni Muslims also fell
victim since their mosque and some shops were also very close to the site,"
he said.

TV footage showed several small shops damaged and a wall pitted with
shrapnel.

A motorcycle was packed with 7kg of explosives in a narrow street, police
said.

Security forces have cordoned off the area, and the injured have been taken
to a local hospital.

"As soon as I reached the mosque exit, a huge blast rocked the area. Many
people fell on me with the impact of the blast," eyewitness Muzammil
Hussain told AFP news agency.

"I saw red and bloodied pieces of human flesh everywhere. It was a scene
I'd never seen in my life before."

Hangu is a Sunni majority town, but is located on the main route to the
mainly Shia Kurram region.

Pakistan has experienced worsening sectarian violence in recent years.

In November, 23 Shia Muslims were killed by a bomb in the city of
Rawalpindi, and last month 19 pilgrims died in an attack on a bus convoy in
Baluchistan.

Then on 10 January, more than 80 people died in twin blasts in a snooker
hall in a Shia area of the city of Quetta.




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