Ammon News - AMMONNEWS (Aljazeera) - At least two people have been killed in near-simultaneous blasts in Pakistan, officials say.
One blast took place inside the offices of the Jamia Naeemia religious school and mosque in the eastern city of Lahore soon after Friday prayers, police said.
The second, a few minutes later, was a car bomb in the northwest of the country.
One of those killed in Lahore when a lone suicide bomber entered the school was a prominent religious leader known to oppose the Taliban, police said.
"Unfortunately, Maulana Sarfraz Naeemi has been martyred," Pervez Rathore, a Lahore police chief, told the Reuters news agency.
Another person was killed and at least six others hurt in the attack.
Nowshera blast
The second blast took place at a mosque in Nowshera, a city in North West Frontier Province, about 100km from the capital, Islamabad.
Thirty-two people were wounded in the car-bomb attack, Abdullah Khan, the local police chief, said.
Some of the victims may have died on the way to hospital, he added.
Kamal Hyder, Al Jazeera's correspondent in Islamabad, said the mosque in Nowshera was in a military area.
"The military pray side-by-side with the locals there, and many more casualties are expected.
"With the Pakistani military about to embark on another offensive against the Taliban, strategic and military thinkers are saying there will be more large-scale attacks across the country," he said.
In recent weeks, Naeemi headed several meetings of religious leaders to denounce Taliban fighters for carrying out suicide blasts, and voiced support for the military operation taking place in Swat.
Naeemi recently passed a religious ruling (fatwa) saying suicide bombings were forbidden. He had been receiving death threats for some time, Al Jazeera's correspondent reported.
Waqar Naeemi, his son, said he was critically wounded in the Lahore blast and later died in hospital.
AFP Photo