Tag: Karachi

  • Search continues after building collapse kills 14 in Karachi, Pakistan

    Search continues after building collapse kills 14 in Karachi, Pakistan

    Rescue teams pulled more bodies from the rubble of a five-storey building collapse in Pakistan overnight, taking the toll on Saturday to 14 as the recovery operation continued for a second day.

    The residential block crumbled shortly after 10:00 am on Friday in the impoverished Lyari neighbourhood of Karachi, which was once plagued by gang violence and considered one of the most dangerous areas in Pakistan.

    Abid Jalaluddin Shaikh, leading the government’s 1122 rescue service at the scene, told AFP the operation continued through the night “without interruption”.

    “It may take eight to 12 hours more to complete,” he said.

    Police official Summiaya Syed, at a Karachi hospital where the bodies were received, told AFP that the death toll on Saturday morning stood at 14, half of them women, with 13 injured.

    Up to 100 people had been living in the building, senior police officer Arif Aziz told AFP.

    All six members of 70-year-old Jumho Maheshwari’s family were at his flat on the first floor when he left for work early in the morning.

    “Nothing is left for me now — my family is all trapped and all I can do is pray for their safe recovery,” he told AFP on Friday afternoon.

    Another resident, Maya Sham Jee, said her brother’s family was also trapped under the rubble.

    “It’s a tragedy for us. The world has been changed for our family,” she told AFP.

    “We are helpless and just looking at the rescue workers to bring our loved ones back safely.”

    Shankar Kamho, 30, a resident of the building who was out at the time, said around 20 families were living inside.

    He described how his wife called him in a panic that the building was cracking.

    I told her to get out immediately,” he told AFP at the scene.

    “She went to warn the neighbours, but one woman told her ‘this building will stand for at least 10 more years’,” he said.

    “Still, my wife took our daughter and left. About 20 minutes later, the building collapsed.”

  • Blast kills two Chinese near Pakistan’s Karachi airport

    Blast kills two Chinese near Pakistan’s Karachi airport

    Two Chinese nationals have been killed and at least ten people injured after an explosion near Jinnah International Airport in Karachi, Pakistan.

    The Chinese embassy in Pakistan said there were “some local casualties” in what it described as a “terrorist attack”, though the overall death toll is still unclear.

    The embassy added that the explosion targeted a convoy of Chinese engineers working on a power project in the country’s Sindh province.

    The separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), which has in recent years carried out attacks on Chinese nationals involved in projects, has claimed responsibility for the attack.

    In a statement released on Monday, the militant group said it had “targeted a high-level convoy of Chinese engineers and investors” arriving from Karachi airport.

    The attack was carried out using a “vehicle-borne improvised explosive device”, Reuters quoted the BLA as saying.

    The explosion happened around 23:00 local time (17:00 GMT).

    The Chinese embassy said that the engineers were part of the Chinese-funded enterprise Port Qasim Power Generation Co Ltd, which aims to build two coal power plants at Port Qasim, near Karachi.

    The plant is part of the China-Pakistan economic corridor, which is also funding a number of infrastructure and energy projects in Pakistan’s Balochistan province, which has a rich supply of natural resources, including gas and minerals.

    The BLA along with other ethnic Baloch groups has fought a long-running insurgency for a separate homeland.

    It has regularly targeted Chinese nationals in the region, claiming ethnic Baloch residents were not receiving their share of wealth extracted from foreign investors.

    The Chinese embassy on Monday reminded its citizens and Chinese enterprises in Pakistan to be vigilant and to “do their best to take safety precautions”. The embassy added that it will thoroughly investigate the attack and “severely punish the murderer”.

    There has also been heightened security in Pakistan as it prepares to host the leaders’ summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO).

    The blast was reportedly heard in various areas around the city, with footage from local media showing thick smoke and cars set alight.

    Sindh Home Minister Ziaul Hasan Lanjar said that the explosion was likely to be have been caused by a suspected improvised explosive device (IED).

    Pictures online show security officials and firefighters investigating the explosion site, where several vehicles have been charred by the blast.

    A police surgeon, Dr Summaiya told Dawn news: “Ten injured persons, including one in critical condition, have been brought the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical College (JPMC).”

    She added the injured included a police constable and a woman.

    A statement posted on X from Sindh’s Interior Minister’s office said that a “tanker truck” had exploded on Airport Road and said the minister was in contact with the Malir Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) regarding the incident.

    “We need to ascertain the facts,” the statement said.

    Jinnah International Airport is functioning as usual today.

    The BLA had claimed responsibility for past assaults on a Pakistani naval airbase near the Gwadar port, another main feature of the China-Pakistan economic corridor.

    In April 2022, it killed three Chinese tutors and a Pakistani driver in a suicide bombing near Karachi University’s Confucius Institute.