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Security officials examine the site of a bomb blast in Kohat, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. The blast in Kohat killed at least nine people and injured 15 others, after an explosive device was planted at the Peshawar Chowk area, according to the police as reported in the local media. Image Credit: Reuters

Peshawar, Pakistan: A bomb planted near a bus stop killed 12 people including two women and a child in a northwestern Pakistani city on Sunday, police said.

They said 12 more were injured when the bomb went off in the city of Kohat in the troubled province of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Police said around five kilogrammes of explosives were planted in a cooking oil container and placed near the bus stop in the city centre before being detonated remotely.

District police chief Salim Khan Marwat gave the death toll, which rose from 10 after two victims died of their injuries in a Peshawar hospital.

The bomb exploded near police and other government offices. It was also close to a busy marketplace and an area where many minority Shiites live.

But authorities said it was too early to comment on the possible target.

The province borders Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas where Al Qaida and Taliban-led militants have sanctuaries.

The attack came hours after Pakistan air force jets bombed militant hideouts in the tribal district of Khyber, killing 18 suspected insurgents and destroying two hideouts, according to security sources.

On Saturday a roadside bomb targeting a local leader of a nationalist party in Buner district in the northwest killed three people and wounded two.

Bloody campaign

No group immediately claimed responsibility for Sunday’s blast, but such attacks are regularly staged by the Pakistani Taliban.

The group has been waging a bloody campaign against the Pakistani state since 2007 which has cost thousands of lives.

Peace talks between the Taliban and the government stalled last week due to a recent surge in insurgent attacks and a claim by a Taliban faction that it had killed 23 kidnapped soldiers.

Government mediators have set a Taliban ceasefire as a precondition for another round of talks.

But Shahidullah Shahid, a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, on Friday blamed Islamabad for the deadlock and urged the state to declare a ceasefire first.

According to an AFP tally, 86 people have been killed in 17 attacks across the country since January 29, when Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif announced formal talks with the Taliban.