QUETTA, Pakistan — Gunmen shot to death six people and wounded 15 in an attack on a former provincial minister outside a mosque in southwest Pakistan on Friday, police said.
The attack in Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, came a day after a Taliban suicide bomber killed 30 people at a police funeral in the city.
Pakistan has experienced a rash of deadly attacks since Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif took office at the beginning of June, sparking criticism that the government doesn't have a coherent plan to fight the growing problem of violent extremism in the country.
The former provincial minister who was attacked Friday, Ali Madad Jatak, escaped unharmed, said police officer Bashir Ahmad Barohi. But six people were killed and 15 wounded, he said.
The attack took place when Jatak and a group of his supporters were coming out of a mosque after sunrise prayers marking the start of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr at the end of the holy month of Ramadan, said Barohi.
Baluchistan is home to both Islamic militants and separatists who have been waging a low-level insurgency against the government for decades.
Suspected separatists killed 13 people they pulled off a bus in Baluchistan earlier this week, as well as a paramilitary soldier who tried to stop them.
Also Friday, guards at a Shiite mosque on the outskirts of the capital, Islamabad, shot and killed a would-be suicide bomber before he could set off his explosives, police officer Abid Hussain said.