Shock follows carnage after suicide bombing outside Islamabad court

Shock follows carnage after suicide bombing outside Islamabad court
Firefighters douse a car at the suicide blast site in Islamabad on November 11, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 4 min 31 sec ago

Shock follows carnage after suicide bombing outside Islamabad court

Shock follows carnage after suicide bombing outside Islamabad court
  • Rare assault at the heart of Pakistan’s capital killed 12, blood stained a two-way street and shattered glass glimmered among the debris
  • Complex, home to several courts, is usually one of busiest areas in Islamabad, nearby offices of senior administration and police officials add to crowds

ISLAMABAD: Charred vehicles and a mangled motorcycle lay outside Islamabad’s district court Tuesday, their metal frames still warm as investigators sealed off the area where a suicide bomber had killed at least 12 people.

It was a rare assault at the heart of Pakistan’s capital where blood stained a two-way street, and shattered glass glimmered among the debris.

“It was a very strong and terrifying explosion,” said Khalid Mandokhel, a 24-year-old lawyer.

“Many of the victims were bystanders,” he told AFP at the scene.

The blue police van hit in the blast stood crippled at the entrance, its metal pierced by shrapnel and tires shredded, as investigators documented every mark on the vehicle.

More than 25 people were wounded in the attack.

Rustam Malik, another lawyer, said he “heard a loud bang at the gate” as he entered the complex, where daily, hundreds of people arrive to sort out legal matters.

They did not expect to leave with their lives hanging by a thread. “There was thick smoke,” Malik told AFP.

Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi told journalists outside the court that the attacker had lingered outside the building for several minutes before striking.

“He could not go inside (the complex); he blew himself up near the police vehicle,” Naqvi said.

’Complete chaos’

The complex, home to several courts, is usually one of the busiest areas in Islamabad during the day. Nearby offices of senior administration and police officials add to the dense crowds.

Outside the government-run hospital where most of the victims were taken, people were milling about as rescue workers wheeled people with head and leg injuries into the emergency room. Security guards, on alert, prevented the media from entering.

Back at the blast site, cordoned off at several points, investigators gathered evidence until late afternoon.

A heavy presence of police and paramilitary soldiers combed through the wreckage as a stray dog rummaged through the remains, sniffing at the scattered debris.

Malik recalled “complete chaos” — lawyers and visitors running in panic after the explosion thundered through the compound.

As investigators processed the scene, the lawyer waited patiently for police clearance so he could collect his vehicle which was damaged in the attack.

“I saw two dead bodies lying at the gate and several cars were on fire,” he said.


Pakistan Taliban deny role in Islamabad suicide blast that killed 12 outside district court

Pakistan Taliban deny role in Islamabad suicide blast that killed 12 outside district court
Updated 7 sec ago

Pakistan Taliban deny role in Islamabad suicide blast that killed 12 outside district court

Pakistan Taliban deny role in Islamabad suicide blast that killed 12 outside district court
  • Explosion hit crowded district court entrance in Islamabad during afternoon proceedings
  • TTP issues denial as Pakistan links attackers to Afghan-based networks amid rising cross-border tensions

ISLAMABAD/KARACHI: The Pakistani Taliban on Tuesday denied involvement in a suicide blast that killed at least twelve people and injured 36 outside a district court in Islamabad, hours after government officials suggested the attack was carried out by militants based in Afghanistan.

The explosion occurred at the entrance of a court complex in the capital city’s G-11 sector, crowded at the time with litigants and lawyers.

“As of now, 12 people have been martyred,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi told reporters outside the court. 

A spokesman for the state-run Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences said 36 people injured in the court blast were brought to the hospital,.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said the attack was carried out by “Fitna Al-Khawarij and Fitna Al-Hindustan,” terms used by the Pakistan government and army for the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which Islamabad alleges operates from sanctuaries in Afghanistan with support from India. Both Kabul and New Delhi deny the accusations.

Defense Minister Khawaja Asif reacted to the blast on X, saying:

“We are in a state of war. Anyone who thinks that the Pakistan Army is fighting this war in the Afghan-Pakistan border region and the remote areas of Balochistan should take today’s suicide attack at the Islamabad district courts as a wake-up call: this is a war for all of Pakistan, in which the Pakistan Army is giving daily sacrifices and making the people feel secure.”

He said the attack showed there was little justification left in hoping for a breakthrough in ongoing peace contacts with the Taliban government in Kabul that began last month. 

Asif added that Afghan authorities had the ability to halt the violence but were allowing the conflict to spill into Pakistani cities, calling the blast a message from Kabul and asserting that Pakistan was capable of responding.

Shortly after the blast, the TTP issued a statement distancing itself from the attack.

“The Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has no connection with the explosion that took place at the Islamabad courts on November 11, 2025,” the group’s spokesman Muhammad Khurasani said.

The court blast came as the army battled militants who had attempted to storm a cadet college in Wana, South Waziristan on Monday, triggering a gunbattle that left at least three people dead. The army’s media wing said security forces had eliminated two attackers and trapped three inside.

On Monday, Pakistani security forces also said they had killed 20 TTP fighters in raids on hideouts in the northwest border region: eight militants were killed Sunday in North Waziristan and 12 more in a separate raid in Dara Adam Khel.

Meanwhile, Pakistan and Afghanistan have traded blame over the collapse of a third round of peace talks in Istanbul over the weekend. The negotiations, facilitated by Qatar and Turkiye, began last month after airstrikes by Pakistan and deadly border clashes that killed soldiers and civilians on both sides.

TTP is separate from but allied with the Afghan Taliban and has been emboldened since the Afghan Taliban’s return to power in 2021. Many TTP leaders and fighters are believed to have taken refuge in Afghanistan since then. TTP often claims attacks in Pakistan, which has seen a surge in militant violence in recent years.

The Islamabad blast came a day after a car explosion in New Delhi that killed at least eight people and injured 20. Indian officials said they were investigating the incident under a counterterrorism law. While Indian authorities have not publicly named a perpetrator, the investigation is unfolding against a backdrop of heightened regional suspicion. 

The two nuclear-armed neighbors frequently accuse each other of supporting militant groups on their soil. Islamabad alleges that Indian intelligence agencies back factions of the TTP operating from Afghanistan to destabilize Pakistan, a charge New Delhi has repeatedly rejected. India, meanwhile, says Pakistan provides safe haven and support to groups involved in attacks in Indian-administered Kashmir, accusations Pakistan denies.

These mutual allegations fueled tensions earlier this year when a militant attack in Indian-administered Kashmir in April killed 22 people, mostly tourists. The incident triggered four days of cross-border shelling, drone strikes and limited air engagements between the two sides in May before a ceasefire was brokered by the United States. 

Analysts warn that the latest violence in Islamabad risks deepening an already volatile security environment between the rivals.