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Deadly blast strikes Pakistan Shia procession

A bomb blast claimed by the Taliban killed seven people near a Shia procession in northwest Pakistan Saturday, despite heightened security across the country.

Four boys were among the dead and 30 other people were injured when the remote-controlled bomb packed with ball bearings exploded on the outskirts of Dera Ismail Khan in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, police said.

The attack on Shias, a minority in Sunni-dominated Pakistan, came as they marched to mourn Prophet Mohamed's grandson Imam Hussein during the holy month of Muharram which culminates Sunday in Ashura, the group's holiest day of the year.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility.

"We carried out the attack against the Shia community," spokesperson Ehsanullah Ehsan told AFP by telephone from an undisclosed location. "The government can make whatever security arrangements it wants but it cannot stop our attacks."

The Taliban had dispatched more than 20 suicide bombers across the country for attacks on the minority community, he said.

The blast followed another suicide attack — also claimed by the Pakistani Taliban — that killed 23 people at a Shia procession in the garrison city of Rawalpindi Thursday, the country's deadliest bombing for five months.

Authorities subsequently ordered heightened security, with services for mobile phones — which are often used to trigger bombs — suspended in major cities.

But that did not prevent Saturday's attack. Police said a 10-kilogram (22-pound) bomb was hidden in a dustbin on the procession route and its powerful blast could be heard several kilometers away.

"The death toll is now seven, four of them are children," local hospital chief Aziz Baluch told AFP. "Four of the wounded were in critical condition, they have been shifted to the central city of Multan."

Akhtar Nawaz, another official at the state-run district headquarters hospital said three children were dead on arrival and the four other people died after being admitted.

City police chief Khalid Suhail said the dead children were aged between six and 11 years. "They were young boys," he said.

Mobile and wireless phone services were temporarily blocked in the commercial capital Karachi, the southwestern city of Quetta and several cities and towns in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab provinces as well as in parts of the capital Islamabad.

It is the second time Pakistan has shut down mobile networks during Muharram.

The Taliban has been fighting an insurgency against security forces since 2007 but the hardline Sunni group has also targeted Shias.

Dera Ismail Khan lies near Pakistan's semi-autonomous tribal belt, where Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants have carved out strongholds.

It also borders the insurgency-hit southwestern province of Baluchistan and populous Punjab province.

Ashura has long been a magnet for sectarian attacks. In December 2009, a suicide bomber killed 43 people at an Ashura procession in Karachi.

During processions, held across the country, Shias carry black banners and replicas of the tombs of Muslim saints as they parade on main roads. Marchers recite elegies, beat their chests with open palms, and some flagellate their bare backs with knives.

Hussein is equally revered by Sunnis but hardliners oppose the public mourning of his martyrdom.

Shias account for around 20 percent of Pakistan's 167 million population.

Nationwide sectarian violence between militants from the two communities is estimated to have killed more than 4,000 people since the late 1990s.

Pakistan says 35,000 people have been killed as a result of militant attacks since the 9/11 attacks and the 2001 US-led invasion of neighboring Afghanistan.

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