'Pools of Blood' Outside Pakistani Courthouse

Suicide bomber strikes in Lahore, killing at least 22, mostly police officers.

ByABC News
February 9, 2009, 2:01 PM

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Jan. 10, 2008 — -- The scene, one policeman said, looked straight out of hell.

Bodies burned in pools of blood after a suicide bomber blew himself up outside of the high court in Lahore, Pakistan, killing at least 22 people this afternoon, officials told ABC News. All but two of those killed were police. More than 70 were wounded and a dozen are listed in critical condition.

The bombing is just the latest attack on Pakistan's institutions the police, the army, and the politicians and comes five weeks before elections that analysts describe as make-or-break for a country considering democracy but also on the verge of disorder.

"There were about 60 to 70 policemen on duty when a man rammed into our ranks and soon there was a huge explosion," Officer Syed Imtiaz Hussain, who was hurt in his legs and groin, told The Associated Press.

"I saw the bodies of other policemen burning."

The bomb, which experts say contained as many as 30 pounds of explosives, sent shrapnel as far as 450 feet away, causing tear gas shells carried by the police to explode, witnesses told ABC News. The gas temporarily prevented aid workers from getting close to victims.

"We heard a blast, we came out and, at the gate on the left hand side, we saw a police contingent in a pool of blood," a witness told the AP television network. "I saw a clerk of a lawyer who was also in a pool of blood."

"Police were a target," Malik Mohammed Iqbal, the chief of police in Lahore, told ABC News. "It came as a surprise. We had taken all humanly possible measures to avoid any such incident."

In response to the bombing, Iqbal said, security in Lahore "has been enhanced. It was already enhanced and now we are making full-proof security arrangements."

The attack's toll could have been much higher. It took place just moments before a group of lawyers were about to begin an anti-government march at the sight of the bombing. One attorney told Pakistan's Dawn TV that the only reason they hadn't left the courthouse to begin the march when the bomb exploded was because the weather was so cold.