At least 32 people were killed and around 169 others injured when a suicide bomber struck Imambargah Khadijah al-Kubra during Friday prayers, according to authorities and hospital officials. The blast occurred as worshippers gathered for Jumma prayers and was accompanied by explosions and gunfire.
The attack was the deadliest in Islamabad in more than a decade and the deadliest nationwide since the Peshawar mosque bombing in January 2023.
Earlier today, security sources said that Pakistani authorities arrested four facilitators and an Afghan mastermind linked to the Islamic State (Daesh). Intelligence and law enforcement agencies carried out raids in Peshawar and Nowshera, arresting the four facilitators of the suicide bomber. The operations were conducted on the basis of technical and human intelligence.
The security officials said the Afghan mastermind of the attack, linked to Daesh, was also arrested. They said the planning, training and indoctrination of the attacker were carried out by Daesh in Afghanistan. The sources alleged that under the patronage of the Afghan Taliban, Daesh and other terrorist organisations posed a serious threat to regional and global peace. During the operations, one security personnel was killed and three others were injured, the sources said.
Addressing a press conference in Islamabad after a high-level security meeting, the interior minister confirmed the arrests and said one police personnel was martyred while three were injured.
Naqvi described Friday as a “black day” for the country and provided updates on the investigation and arrests following the deadly Islamabad blast.
“Following the blast, all our agencies went out on the lead. Operations continued throughout the night. The Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) police have arrested almost all individuals linked to the attack or the masterminds behind it,” he said.
He congratulated the CTD and K-P police teams for their efforts.
“Immediately after the blast, a raid was conducted in Nowshera, and four facilitators were arrested. The ISIS mastermind, an Afghan national, has also been captured. During the raid, one assistant sub-inspector from the K-P police was martyred. The main mastermind is linked to ISIS and is in our custody,” Naqvi said.
The interior minister said that the network behind the blast was trained in Afghanistan and that authorities had gathered intelligence on the suspects before the attack.
“All the planning for this incident took place in Afghanistan, where they were trained. We had information regarding them. We did not expect to apprehend them so quickly, but our agencies did an excellent job,” he said.
Naqvi added that the entire Islamic State network in Pakistan had been dismantled and accused external actors of financing the group.
“This network has been completely captured. These people operate for money. Community intelligence is very important for us, and we need to work on it. I can say with confidence that if one attack happens, we stop 99,” he said.
He criticised media coverage, suggesting it could spread panic, and stressed the need to upgrade Pakistan’s security systems.
The interior minister alleged that India was funding Islamic State operations in Pakistan, providing targets and financial support in dollars.
“All their funding is coming from India. They are providing them targets and putting them on the front line. I claim that one day the whole world will ask who is sponsoring them. Everything costs money, and they are receiving funds in dollars. They have tripled their budget,” he said.
He said he planned to brief Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar on the matter.
Naqvi criticised the use of videos by the banned Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) militant group to project a false image of Pakistan’s security situation.
“The BLA regularly makes videos, and then an incident occurs. Afterwards, these videos are circulated on the Indian media. No one asks them why they are running BLA videos. They have created an entire system,” he said.
Naqvi said the videos were intended to give the impression that terrorists had control over Pakistan — a claim he rejected.
“They want to show that Pakistan is overrun by terrorists. There is no truth in that. They carry out attacks and then flee like cowards. When there is war, categories do not matter. When there is war, it is war,” he said.
He called on the public to understand the realities of security challenges.
“We are very clear on this, and the public also needs clarity,” he said.
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This is a developing story