The attack sparked riots as people rampaged through the city, setting fire to markets and stores. Firefighters were still battling the flames on Tuesday, with authorities calling for reinforcements from the city of Hyderabad, 170 kilometers (105 miles) north of Karachi, Pakistan’s main commercial hub. Karachi Mayor Mustafa Kamal said the city’s largest wholesale market was on fire, and that hundreds of shops had been destroyed, with damages estimated to run into millions of dollars.
Interior Minister Rehman Malik, who visited Karachi on Tuesday, said authorities were still trying to determine whether the attack had been carried out by a suicide bomber, as he had said Monday.
Taliban-linked violence
“The investigation is still going on to determine whether it was a suicide attack or some improvised explosive device was used,” said Malik, who appealed for calm and said he had ordered an investigation into who was behind the rioting. “If anyone is trying to cripple Karachi, then he is also trying to cripple Pakistan,” the minister said.
Senior health official Hashim Malik said the death toll increased to 43 on Tuesday. Many among the dozens wounded were critically hurt, and several died overnight and on Tuesday morning.
Karachi has largely been spared the Taliban-linked violence that has struck much of the rest of the country, a fact that analysts believe is driven by the group’s tendency to use the teeming metropolis as a place to rest and raise money. But the city has been the scene of frequent sectarian, ethnic and political violence.
It was unclear who was behind Monday’s bombing. Pakistani authorities say sectarian groups have teamed up with Taliban and al-Qaeda militants waging war against the government in a joint effort to destabilize Pakistan. More than 500 people have been killed in attacks since mid-October when the army launched a major anti-Taliban offensive in the country’s northwest.
“A deliberate attempt seems to be afoot by the extremists to turn the fight against militants into a sectarian clash and make the people fight against one another,” said President Asif Ali Zardari in a statement on Monday. Monday’s bombing struck at the start of a procession of Shiites marking Ashoura, the most important day of a monthlong mourning period for the seventh-century death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson, Imam Hussein. Minority Shiites have suffered frequent attacks by Sunni extremist groups who regard them as heretical.
“I fell down when the bomb went off with a big bang,” said Naseem Raza, a 26-year-old who was marching in the procession. “I saw walls stained with blood and splashed with human flesh.”
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