Deaths in Pakistan hospital blast
At least eight people killed and 35 wounded in explosion in Quetta in Balochistan province.

The emergency room was full of his friends and relatives when the bomber struck at the gate, Mohammad Sabir, a police official, said.
Zahir Shah Kazmi, a senior police officer who was briefing reporters at the hospital about the attack on the bank executive, was killed in the bombing.
The dead cameraman worked for Samaa TV, a Pakistani television station. Several journalists also present at the scene were wounded.
The bank manager came from a prominent Shia family. An armed man shot him as he stepped out of his car outside the bank on a major city road, officials said.
Sectarian violence
Pakistan, and Quetta in particular, has a history of sectarian violence between extremist groups from the minority Shia and majority Sunni Muslims.
Several of Pakistan’s Sunni extremist groups also are allied with the Taliban and al-Qaeda, who view Shia Muslims as infidels.
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In a separate incident on Friday, a suspected US missile attack killed four suspected fighters in Pakistan’s northwestern tribal belt, officials said.
The alleged missile attack took place in the Torkhel area in North Waziristan, a tribal region filled with al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters focused on attacking US and Nato soldiers across the border in Afghanistan.
At least four suspected fighters were killed, Noor Ahmad, a Pakistan government official, said.
The exact identities of the dead were not immediately known.
The US has frequently targeted North Waziristan in its campaign to kill al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders using missiles.