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- Police report says no evidence of attack from outside found.
- More than 40 people were injured and least 15 people were killed.
- Explosions did not appear to be suicide attack, CTD DIG says.
SWAT: An initial investigation conducted by the police suggests that the primary reason behind the two explosions at a Counter Terrorism Department (CTD) police station in Swat was a short circuit in the ammunition depot.
“No evidence of an attack from outside has been found,” the police claimed in the preliminary investigation report prepared after the blast rocked CTD police station in Swat’s Kabal a day earlier.
The police confirmed that at least 15 people were martyred and more than 40 people were injured due to the explosion and are currently under treatment.
“There is a high possibility that the blast was caused by a short circuit as fire erupted in the armoury [a place where weapons are kept],” the police report stated.
CTD DIG Khalid Sohail, while speaking to media persons, said that ammunition caught fire due to negligence. He revealed that the incident took place in old office of the CTD.
He also ruled out the possibility that the explosions were suicide attacks or other acts of terrorism.
“There was a store where we had a huge quantity of weapons, and until now we believe that there might have been some blast in it due to some carelessness,” he said.
Sohail said the shock waves caused “the complete collapse of the building”.
Following the blast, Inspector general of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Police Akhtar Hayat Gandapur said: “A series of two to three bomb explosions occurred. He added that “majority of the victims” were policemen.
Footage from the site showed a body being stretchered from the rubble as a smattering of small fires blazed in the darkness.
On Twitter, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif initially described Monday’s blasts as a “suicide attack”.
“Our police has been the first line of defence against terrorism,” he tweeted.
Late at night, he tweeted an update saying “The nature of the blast is being investigated”.
In January, a suicide bomber detonated his vest in a mosque inside a police compound in Peshawar, killing more than 80 officers as the building collapsed and rained down rubble on worshippers.
The following month, five were killed when a suicide squad stormed a police compound in the southern port city of Karachi, prompting an hours-long shootout.
The country, which is home to over 220 million people, has witnessed a dramatic uptick in attacks since late last year.
— Additional input from AFP
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