Peshawar, Pakistan: Muslims across the country offered Eid Al Fitr prayers at thousands of congregations on Monday.
Foolproof security arrangements were made by police to protect people who came to pray at mosques, Eidgahs and open spaces in cities, towns and villages.
Special prayers were offered for peace, stability and progress of Pakistan and unity of Muslim Ummah.
After prayers, people embraced each other and exchanged Eid greetings.
However, the first day of Eid went ahead in a subdued atmosphere as people felt saddened at the recent tragedies in Ahmedpur Sharqia, Parachinar and Quetta.
People in Pakistan’s restive northwest protested Monday as the death toll from twin blasts three days earlier rose to 69, marking a grisly Eid for the town worst hit by militancy so far in 2017.
Dozens of protesters offered their Eid prayers wearing black armbands in the market in Parachinar, where the bombs tore through crowds of shoppers on Friday, local officials said.
“The death toll from Friday’s blasts has reached 69,” local administration official Basir Khan Wazir said.
He said the local administration was trying to negotiate with the protesters.
Parachinar, capital of Kurram district, a mainly Shiite area of Pakistan’s tribal belt, had already suffered two deadly bomb blasts in its markets this year.
It was the site of the first major attack in the country in 2017 when a bomb killed 24 people in January, an attack claimed by the Pakistani Taliban. In March, a second Taliban attack in another market killed a further 22 people.
Friday’s assault brought the town’s loss of life due to extremist attacks up to 115, more than any one city in Pakistan has suffered so far this year.
It was claimed by a little known group believed to be linked to Lashkar-e-Janghvi, one of Pakistan’s bloodiest sectarian outfits.
Kurram, one of Pakistan’s seven semi-autonomous tribal districts, is known for sectarian clashes.
“We have been a constant target of the Taliban but the government has always failed us,” Muzamil Hussain, from Parachinar said.
Authorities have said that after the first two attacks checkposts and barriers were set up around the city’s markets. Hussain said that suggested Friday’s attackers had insider help.
“I don’t understand how can someone drive a bomb-laden vehicle through all the checkposts of the military and other paramilitary troops and reach here, it simply isn’t logical, and this is what we are protesting against,” he said.
“We are demanding the government end supporting militant groups,” he added.
People in other parts of the country also wore black bands in solidarity with those grieving in Parachinar, the Majlis Wahdat-e-Muslimeen Pakistan Shiite political party said in a statement.
In Quetta, capital of southwestern Balochistan province, 14 people including 10 policemen were killed in a blast targeting police that was claimed by both Daesh’s local affiliate and an offshoot of the Pakistani Taliban.
While in Karachi four policemen were killed in a drive-by shooting as they ate dinner at a roadside restaurant in the port city.