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Deadly blast at Pakistan funeral Bomb hits Pakistan Shia funeral
(about 4 hours later)
At least five people have been killed in a blast at the funeral of a Shia cleric in north-western Pakistan, police say. A bomb has killed at least six people at the funeral of a Shia Muslim in north-western Pakistan, police say.
Several others were injured in the explosion, in the town of Dera Ismail Khan, reports said. The blast, in the town of Dera Ismail Khan, injured many more. The town has a history of violence between Sunni and Shia Muslims.
Soon after the blast, the sound of gunfire was heard, triggering a stampede and panic in the area, a local television channel reported. In violence elsewhere, a suicide bomber killed nine worshippers on Thursday night at a mosque in the tribal district of Bajaur.
Violence between Shia and Sunni Muslims is common in Dera Ismail Khan. The dead included the head of a local militia formed to fight the Taleban.
"A funeral procession of a Shia victim was on its way to the graveyard when a powerful explosion hit it," AFP news agency quoted local police official Khurshid Khan as saying. Mourning hymns
"At least five people have died in the attack," Ashiq Saleem, medical superintendent of the city's main government hospital told the BBC. The bomb in Dera Ismail Khan exploded as Shia Muslims were burying a man murdered on Thursday. Before the funeral took place a Shia cleric was killed in the town.
The funeral was for a local Shia cleric killed on Thursday in what the police say appeared to be sectarian violence between Sunnis and Shias. "One of our men was martyred yesterday and one today. We were taking the coffin to the graveyard, reciting mourning hymns, when suddenly this blast happened," mourner Tauqir Zaidi told the Reuters news agency.
The wreckage of a video and CD shop bombed last week in Dera Ismail Khan
It is not clear how the bomb was triggered. Officials said it appeared to be another sectarian attack.
It provoked an outbreak of shooting near the hospital where the injured were taken for treatment.
Dera Ismail Khan lies in North West Frontier Province (NWFP). The province's police chief, Malik Naveed, told the BBC Urdu service that six people were confirmed dead but the death toll could rise.
The town, like many in the north-west, has also seen attacks on video and CD shops which militants consider to be un-Islamic.
The great majority of Pakistan's Muslims are Sunni. Shias form about 15%. Violence between the two communities dates back to the 1980s.
Further north, in district of Bajaur, there was more violence blamed on the Pakistan Taleban late on Thursday when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives at a mosque.
Among the dead was the head of a local militia formed to fight the Taleban.
The army has been encouraging the tribes to take on the militants in their areas and suspected Taleban insurgents have retaliated with attacks on tribal gatherings.
For some months the Pakistan military has waged a sustained campaign against Islamic militants in Bajaur that forced up to 300,000 people to flee their homes.
US ambassador summoned
The United States has been encouraging the Pakistan government to step up its fight against Islamist militants.
The rubble of a house hit by a US drone missile attack near Bannu
But at the same time relations have soured over America's growing use since August of unmanned drone aircraft to carry out missile attacks on targets across the border from Afghanistan.
On Thursday the US ambassador in Islamabad was summoned to receive a formal protest over a drone attack near the town of Bannu.
The Bannu attack was unusual in that it took place in NWFP, much deeper inside Pakistani territory than previous attacks.