LAHORE, Pakistan — Pakistan’s minority Christians blocked roads today in protest over a pair of Taliban suicide bombings that struck two churches the day before, killing 15 people in the latest attack against religious minorities in this increasingly fractured country.
Authorities said all Christian schools would remain closed as prayer services and funerals for the victims get underway later Monday, said Pakistani shipping and ports minister and Christian community leader Kamran Michael.
He appealed on fellow Christians to remain peaceful.
Pakistani Interior Minister Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan denounced the twin church attacks as an “inhuman act of terrorism” and said it also reflects the militants “frustration” in the face of a stepped-up military operation against them. Last June, Pakistan launched a major operation to rout militants from their strongholds and has claimed success in the offensive.
“We have shrunk the space for them to operate,” Khan said Monday.
Sunday’s bombings in the eastern city of Lahore struck in quick succession in the Christian neighborhood of Youhanabad during morning services. The bombers detonated their suicide vests outside the two churches, which are located about 650 yards apart. At least 70 people were wounded in the attacks.
After the attacks, angry Christian mobs blocked the highway, ransacked bus terminals and burned two people to death who they suspected of being involved in the attacks.
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