Key Points
- At least 90 people have died as a result of an explosion at a mosque in Peshawar, Pakistan.
- A surviving police officer said the screams of his fellow colleagues are "echoing" in his mind.
- Nobody has claimed responsibility for the attack as the rest of the country is placed on high alert.
A moment for prayer and solace in a place of worship for hundreds of Muslims.
Seconds later, an explosion. Billowing black smoke, rubble, and buried bodies.
These were the harrowing moments recounted by a police officer after a bomb exploded during afternoon prayer in a Pakistan police compound on Monday, killing more than 60 people and injuring hundreds.
Most of those who died were police officers in the provincial city of Peshawar, close to former tribal areas along the Afghan border where militancy has been steadily rising.
People carry the body of their relative, who was a victim in the attack inside a mosque. Source: AAP / Muhammad Sajjad/AP
"I saw black smoke rising to the sky. I ran out to save my life," the 47-year-old said.
"The screams of the people are still echoing in my mind."
As darkness fell, several men were still trapped in the wreckage, visible through cracks in the concrete.
'Many policemen are buried under the rubble'
A frantic rescue mission was continuing overnight at the mosque, which had an entire wall and some of its roof blown out by the possible suicide attack.
More bodies are being pulled from the debris, with the toll rising to at least 90 killed and 170 others wounded so far, according to Reuters news agency.
Senior local government official Riaz Mahsud told Reuters the death toll is likely to rise as search teams cut through the debris to find survivors.
"We cut three main beams of the building and efforts are underway to cut the remaining one," he said.
Peshawar police chief Muhammad Ijaz Khan said many of his colleagues are believed to buried under the rubble as between 300 and 400 police officers usually attended daily prayers.
"Efforts are being made to get them out safely."
He put the latest death toll at 95, with more than 221 wounded.
Bloodied survivors emerged limping from the wreckage, while bodies were ferried away in ambulances.
Officers said the blast came from the second row of worshippers, with investigators looking into the possibility of a suicide attack.
"It's an emergency situation," Muhammad Asim Khan, a spokesman for the main hospital in Peshawar said.
At least 20 of the killed police officers were later buried after a prayer ceremony with coffins lined up in rows and draped in the Pakistani flag.
Security officials gather for funeral prayers of police officers, who were killed in the bombing inside a mosque. Source: AAP / AP
The officers were laid to rest with a guard of honour, a police official told AFP.
No group has yet claimed responsibility for the attack, which came amid a worsening security situation in the country.
Pakistan on high alert
The police headquarters in Peshawar is in one of the most tightly-controlled areas of the city, housing intelligence and counter-terrorism bureaus, and is next door to the regional secretariat.
Provinces around the country announced they were on high alert after the blast, with checkpoints ramped up and extra security forces deployed, while in the capital Islamabad snipers were deployed on buildings and at city entrance points.
Security officials inspect the site of a mosque blast inside the police headquarters in Peshawar. Source: Getty / Maaz Ali
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday condemned the blast as "abhorrent" and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken extended his condolences for the "horrific attack".
History of violence
The security situation in Pakistan – once plagued by bombings until a major military crackdown that began in 2014 largely restored order - has deteriorated since the return of the Afghan Taliban in Kabul.
The Pakistan government has accused the new rulers of failing to secure their mountainous border, allowing militants to travel back and forth without being detected.
The biggest threat comes from a resurgent Pakistani Taliban, a separate movement from the Afghan Taliban but with a similar ideology, which has sharply increased low-casualty attacks on police and security forces.
The group has denied responsibility for the bombing.
Meanwhile, the regional chapter of the self-proclaimed Islamic State group - whose numbers were bolstered by prison breaks in Afghanistan in 2021 - claimed an attack last year on a minority Shiite mosque in Peshawar that killed 64, Pakistan's deadliest terror attack since 2018.
Detectives said the bomber was an Afghan exile who had returned home to train for the attack.
Additional reporting: Reuters