Pakistan condemns Syria church suicide bombing as death toll surges to 25

People and rescuers inspect the damage at the site of a reported suicide attack at the Saint Elias church in Damascus' Dwelaa area on June 22, 2025. (AFP)
People and rescuers inspect the damage at the site of a reported suicide attack at the Saint Elias church in Damascus' Dwelaa area on June 22, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 24 June 2025
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Pakistan condemns Syria church suicide bombing as death toll surges to 25

Pakistan condemns Syria church suicide bombing as death toll surges to 25
  • Suicide bomber targeted packed Mar Elias Church on outskirts of Damascus on Sunday
  • Pakistan reaffirms support for efforts aimed at achieving lasting peace, stability in Syria

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office this week condemned a suicide attack targeting a church in Syria that killed 25 people, reaffirming its support for efforts aimed at achieving lasting peace in the country. 

Syrian state media reported that a suicide bomber carried out an attack inside the packed Mar Elias Church in Dweil’a on the outskirts of Damascus on Sunday. While no group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, the Syrian Interior Ministry said a fighter from the Daesh group entered the church and fired at the people there before detonating himself with an explosives vest.

“Pakistan strongly condemns the heinous suicide bombing at the Mar Elias Church in the Dweila neighborhood of Damascus, Syria, on 22 June 2025, which resulted in the loss of precious lives and left many injured,” Pakistan’s foreign ministry said in a press release on Monday. 

Islamabad expressed its heartfelt condolences to the families of the victims and prayed for the speedy recovery of the injured.

“Pakistan stands in full solidarity with the brotherly people of Syria in this hour of grief, and reaffirms its strong support for efforts aimed at achieving lasting peace and stability in the country,” the foreign ministry added. 

The church suicide blast was the first of its kind in Syria in years, and came as an interim government in Syria led by President Ahmed Al-Sharaa tries to win the support of minorities.

Syria has made major inroads into the international fold since President Bashar Assad was removed in December 2024 after over a decade of civil war in the restive country. His ouster led to the United States and the European Union lifting its sanctions on the Arab country. 


‘We are not afraid’: Pakistani lawyers show solidarity after Islamabad court bombing

‘We are not afraid’: Pakistani lawyers show solidarity after Islamabad court bombing
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‘We are not afraid’: Pakistani lawyers show solidarity after Islamabad court bombing

‘We are not afraid’: Pakistani lawyers show solidarity after Islamabad court bombing
  • Lawyers show up to Islamabad district court to show defiance and solidarity after suicide blast that killed 12 and wounded 36
  • Attack, first on civilians in the capital in a decade, comes amid heightened tensions with Afghanistan and India over militancy

ISLAMABAD: Lawyers in Pakistan’s capital Islamabad on Wednesday expressed solidarity with the victims of a deadly suicide bombing outside a court building a day earlier, calling for an end to the fear atmosphere in the country.

The blast, which killed 12 people and wounded 36, was the first strike on civilians in Islamabad in a decade.

“This atmosphere of fear needs to be ended, and we need to try to get all the lawyers together and express our solidarity. And we need to look into our security lapses so that we can cover them up (rectify them),” said lawyer Iffat Soomro.

Another lawyer, Khalil Ahmed Baloch, said they had come to the court building to show their support for the public and to remove fear. “There is fear, but we have come because if the lawyers do not come, then what will happen to the public? There will be more fear,” he said.

The government has vowed to investigate the attack and take action against those responsible. The Pakistani Taliban denied involvement in the bombing, but tensions remain high between Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistan, which Islamabad has accused of harboring militants. Kabul denies this.

The attack came as Pakistan is locked in confrontation with both Kabul and New Delhi, fighting a four-day war with India in May and then last month carrying out airstrikes in Afghanistan, including Kabul, in response to what it said was the presence of Pakistani militants there. Subsequent skirmishes on the Pakistan-Afghan border were followed by unsuccessful peace talks.

The main Pakistani militant group, Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, otherwise known as the Pakistani Taliban, denied involvement in the attacks. The Taliban administration in Kabul said in a statement that it “expresses its deep sorrow and condemnation” of the attacks. 

Pakistani Taliban militants have in recent years focused attacks on security forces. Civilians had not been hit in Islamabad for a decade, according to Armed Conflict Location and Event Data, a group that tracks attacks.

Another attack on a school in Wana, in the northwest, began Monday, when a suicide vehicle rammed the main entrance, killing three people. Militants then entered the school, which is run by the military but educates civilians.

Analysts said that it seemed to be an attempt to replicate a 2014 attack on another army-run school in the northwest, in which more than 130 children were killed.

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