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Explosives traces found on Pakistan bus

Gibran Naiyyar Peshimam and Yew Lun TianAAP
Chinese officials say they will send a team to help investigate a fatal bus accident in Pakistan.
Camera IconChinese officials say they will send a team to help investigate a fatal bus accident in Pakistan. Credit: AP

Pakistan says traces of explosives had been detected during an initial investigation into a bus blast that killed 13 people, including nine Chinese workers, and adds a terrorist attack could not be ruled out as the cause of the incident.

Wednesday's blast in northwest Pakistan sent the bus hurtling over a ravine.

Officials in Beijing initially said it was a bomb attack but later backed away from the assertion and said it would send a team to help investigate.

Pakistan originally blamed a mechanical failure but on Thursday Information Minister Fawad Chaudhry tweeted: "Initial investigations... have now confirmed traces of explosives. Terrorism cannot be ruled out."

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China is a close ally and major investor in Pakistan and various anti-Pakistani government militants have in the past attacked Chinese projects.

The Chinese workers killed on the bus were employed at the Dasu hydroelectric project, part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a $US65 billion ($A87 billion) investment plan aiming to link western China to the southern Pakistani port of Gwadar.

CPEC is part of China's massive Belt and Road Initiative.

Chaudhry said Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan was personally supervising all developments in the matter.

"In this regard government is in close coordination with Chinese embassy, we are committed to fight menace of terrorism together," Chaudhry added in his tweet.

Zhao Lijian, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, told a regular briefing earlier on Thursday that China would cooperate closely with Pakistan in the investigation.

On Wednesday, Zhao had called the blast a "bomb attack" but Pakistan said a mechanical failure caused a gas leak that led to the explosion.

Senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi met Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi on Wednesday and urged Pakistan to investigate the blast but he stopped short of calling it an attack, the Chinese foreign ministry said on its website.

However, Wang told Qureshi that if it was indeed an attack, Pakistan should immediately arrest the culprits and punish them severely.

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