PARACHINAR, Pakistan — The death toll from a pair of overnight bombings at a busy market in northern Pakistan rose to 49 on Saturday with 10 more people dying at a hospital, officials said.
The bombings struck Friday in the town of Parachinar, which sits in the Kurram tribal area that borders Afghanistan to the west. The market was full of people hurrying to buy items for their evening meal that breaks the day-time fast during the holy month of Ramadan.
Hospital official Shabir Hussain said at least 49 people had died and 167 were wounded in the attacks.
Dead bodies quickly overwhelmed Parachinar's main hospital, as large numbers of people sought medical attention after the blasts, said Hussain, who works at the hospital. He said 25 people were listed in a critical condition.
"We have no place to keep the wounded," another doctor, Zahid Hussain, said late Friday. "Many of them are lying on the hospital floor and on the lawn."
The apparently coordinated bombs hit the main bazaar as people were doing their evening shopping before the iftar meal, police spokesman Fazal Naeem Khan said.
One bomb was believed to have been planted on a motorcycle, Khan said.
The second bomb detonated about four minutes after the first, about 400 yards (365 meters) away from the initial blast, said government official Javed Ali.