Story highlights
- Two bombers attack church in Quetta, but only one detonates his vest
- Church was packed with more than 400 people, police say
Two attackers targeted a Methodist church in Quetta, but only one managed to detonate his vest, said Sarfaraz Bugti, the interior minister of Balochistan province. The second attacker was shot by a church security guard before he detonated his explosives, Bugti said.
The civilians were killed during the blast and the intense firefight that followed, according to Moazzam Jah Ansari, the provincial police chief. More than 400 people were in the church at the time of the attack, he said.
Bugti tweeted that law enforcement agencies took 16 minutes to complete their operation.
More than two dozen others were wounded, said Wasim Baig, a spokesman for Quetta Civil Hospital, where victims were transported.
The ISIS affilliate in Afghanistan and Pakistan said it was behind the attack. In a text message to CNN, a commander of the affiliate, known as ISIS Khorasan, said that details on the attack and a formal claim of responsibility will be released by the Amaq news agency, the media wing of the terror group.
Pakistan's Foreign Office condemned the attack, tweeting that the nation's "resolve against terrorism cannot be deterred by these cowardly acts."
Quetta is the largest city and provincial capital of Balochistan province.
Christians make up 2% of Pakistan's population, and face persecution from hardline Islamists, who want to see a strict interpretation of Islamic law take precedence in the legal system.
Previous attacks on Christians include a suicide attack in Lahore that killed at least 14 people in March 2015, and suicide attacks on a church in Peshawar in 2013 that killed more than 80 people.
Attacks by terror groups in the nation are not limited to Christians.