An explosion outside the Karachi, Pakistan, airport kills 2 workers from
China and injures others
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[October 07, 2024]
By ADIL JAWAD
KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — A massive blast outside the Karachi airport in
southern Pakistan killed two workers from China on Sunday and injured at
least eight others in the latest deadly attack on Chinese in the
country.
Police and the provincial government said a tanker exploded near what is
Pakistan's largest airport. Video showed flames engulfing cars and a
thick column of smoke rising from the scene. There was a heavy military
deployment at the site, which was cordoned off.
A Chinese Embassy statement said that a convoy carrying Chinese staff of
the Port Qasim Electric Power Company (Private) Limited had been
attacked around 11 p.m., killing two Chinese and injuring one other. It
said there were Pakistani casualties as well.
Thousands of Chinese workers are in Pakistan, most of them involved in
Beijing’s multibillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative, which is
building major infrastructure projects to improve trade routes with the
rest of the world.
The airport attack followed a deadly day of attacks in August that
killed more than 50 people in nearby Balochistan province and that Prime
Minister Shehbaz Sharif said sought to harm Chinese-funded development
projects.
Balochistan is home to a separatist insurgency demanding independence
and that accuses the federal government of unfairly exploiting the oil-
and mineral-rich province at the expense of locals.
Rahat Hussain, who works in the civil aviation department, said Sunday's
blast in Karachi was so big that it shook the airport’s buildings.
The provincial home minister, Zia Ul Hassan, told local TV station Geo
that the explosion was an attack targeting foreigners.
The Chinese Embassy statement called the explosion a “terrorist attack”
and said that China is working with Pakistan to handle the aftermath. It
called for a thorough investigation to punish the perpetrators and
reminded Chinese citizens in the country to take safety precautions.
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Security officials examine the site of an explosion that caused
injures and destroyed vehicles outside Karachi airport, Pakistan,
early Monday, Oct. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Fareed Khan)
“The Chinese Embassy and Consulates General in Pakistan strongly
condemn this terrorist attack (and) express deep condolences to the
innocent victims of both countries,” the statement said.
Deputy Inspector General East Azfar Mahesar told media that it
seemed like it was an oil tanker explosion.
“We are determining the nature and reasons for the blast. It takes
time." Police officers were among the injured, he added.
The home minister and inspector general also visited the blast site,
but they did not talk to the media.
A suicide bombing killed five Chinese engineers and a Pakistani
driver in March in northwestern Pakistan as they headed to the Dasu
Dam, the biggest hydropower project in the country.
Five Japanese workers en route to a factory in Karachi escaped
unharmed in April after a suicide bomber targeted their van. One
bystander was killed.
In 2022, three Chinese educators and their Pakistani driver were
kille d when an explosion ripped through a van at the University of
Karachi.
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Associated Press writer Ken Moritsugu in Beijing contributed to this
report.
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