The death of dozens of people in Multan yesterday following two bomb blasts at a banned religious organization's gathering is the latest massacre in a series of recent acts of terrorism.
It comes on the heels of last Friday's suicide bombing at a rival sect's mosque in Sialkot which killed 31 people. As in Sialkot last week, the army has been called in to maintain law and order following the carnage.
The gathering in question was held to mark the first death anniversary of MNA Maulana Azam Tariq, the late chief of the banned Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan who was gunned down by unknown assailants near Islamabad last year.
The statements being issued condemning the latest attack echo those routinely made by the authorities every time terrorists strike. The religious leaders too are likely to hide behind hypocritical grandstanding, attributing the latest atrocity to the enemies of Islam - the rationale being that no Muslim can kill fellow Muslims.
It is this kind of wilful denial of reality on the part of all concerned, besides failure of the intelligence and law enforcement agencies, that has left sectarian violence and acts of terrorism unchecked.
The truth is that sectarian hatred of a ferocious kind is very much present in our midst. A 'foreign hand', even if one is to be found behind a given act of terror, is an exception rather than the rule.
The demon itself is nurtured and goaded on by a section of priests on both sides of the sectarian divide preaching hatred and intolerance. Luckily, the vast majority of the people do not share this intolerant sectarian view of their faith.
This is reason enough for the authorities to come down hard on those few rogue elements who are preaching and practising violence in the name of religion. How many more bloodbaths of innocent people do we need to wake up to this reality?
Hazardous hospital waste
Notices have been served on 20 public and private sector hospitals and clinics in Lahore on grounds of hazardous disposal of biomedical waste and thus being guilty of violation of the Pakistan Environmental Protection Act 1997 and the Punjab Local Government Ordinance 2001.
According to reports, Lahore's combined medical facilities, that include almost 100 hospitals, 800 private clinics, and a large number of laboratories, produce close to 11 tons of waste out of which more than three tons is believed to be infectious.
Had the hospitals in question and those others not yet proceeded against been conforming to the rules of safe disposal, they would have been separating the waste at source, thus minimizing the risk to people's health.
Instead, all hospital waste is dumped together, enabling scavengers to retrieve infected needles and surgical instruments, used urine and blood bags, etc. for recycling purposes, thus aggravating the threat to public health.
A stricter check has to be kept on medical outlets to ensure that such careless and unethical behaviour is not allowed - especially in cases where the hospital staff makes a profit by auctioning the waste for money.
Hospital waste must be disposed of in the prescribed manner, and even here, the authorities would do well to look into alternative ways of disposal other than the standard process of incineration that carries its own risks. But while the incinerators remain, they should be kept in working condition and away from the public as noxious fumes resulting from faulty devices could pose another health hazard.
Meanwhile, there should be greater pressure on owners of medical units or high-ups in government facilities to impress on their staff the importance of proper waste disposal and to take action against those found guilty of flouting the rules.