Killers on Rampage in
Pakistan
Cellular
phone use was suspended on Friday (11.00 to 18.00 Pakistan Standard Time) in
Karachi (capital of Sindh province) and there were indications of a possible
suspension in Peshawar (capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province) in Pakistan.
Though, no major incident took place on the day killers started their rampage
on Saturday.
While the
news of killing of personnel from law enforcement agencies has already appeared
in Eurasia Review, according to details available in the local media,
kidnappers killed 21 of 23 law enforcement personnel in the wee hours of
Sunday.
Personnel from the law enforcing agency were shot dead in a cricket
ground near Peshawar’s Jan-e-Khawarr area. These were kidnapped on Thursday
after attacks on two posts by militants in the provincial capital. The
attackers were wearing uniforms of security forces and were armed with
rocket-propelled grenades and automatic weapons.
The spokesman
of Therik-e-Taliban for Dara Adamkhel, Mohammad Afridi, has informed a Karachi
based newspaper by phone that his group had carried out the attacks.
The
government was seeking the help of local tribal elders to rescue the
kidnapped officials and a local Jirga was conducting dialogues with the
militant group but the talks did not succeed.
In another
incident, 15 people have been killed and several others injured after three
passenger buses came under attack in Mastung’s Dringarh area of Balochistan.
The intensity of blast is evident from a photograph placed at the website of
Geo television aired from Karachi.
Initial
reports suggested that a suicide bomber rammed an explosive-laden vehicle into
the bus. The explosion occurred when the buses, carrying Shia pilgrims from
Taftan in Iran to Quetta, reached Mastung. Shias regularly travel to Taftan
onwards to perform pilgrimage. One of the buses caught fire as a result of the
intensive explosion and was completely destroyed whereas the two other buses
also suffered partial damage.
A blast in
Peshawar on Sunday injured one person. No casualties or major damage was
reported after the blast. The blast occurred at the gate of Shama Cinema near
Bacha Khan Chowk in Faqirabad area of Peshawar.
In another
incident in the provincial capital of Balochistan, gunmen riding motorcycles
opened fire and killed four policemen. The attackers sprayed bullets at police
on a routine vehicle patrol.
It may be
recalled that Balochistan, rich in oil and gas, is plagued by sectarian
violence, a tribal insurgency and attacks by Taliban militants. Gun and bomb
attacks frequently target police and security personnel in Balochistan.
In the
provincial capital of Sindh, Karachi at least six people were killed when in
explosion ripping apart a passenger bus parked near the Karachi Cantonment
Railway Station on Saturday evening.
The blast
completely destroyed the bus. There are reports that five people have been
killed and at least 48 injured in the blast, some of them said to be in
critical condition.
To outsiders
these incidents may not look connected, but the purpose is common, weaken
Pakistan and plunge the country into anarchy.
Therik-e-Taliban
is notorious for undertaking attacks on sensitive installations and people
belonging to security forces/law enforcing agencies. The latest attempts are
also aimed at terrorizing people before Chelum of Imam Hussan, they have
attacked Ashurra procession in D. I. Khan.
Killing in
Mustung is part of an ongoing genocide of Shias by the perpetrators getting
funds from outside. This faction even does not consider Shias to be Muslim, and
call them Kafir. This killing is often attributed to a Balochistan based
banned outfit Jundullah. This group also undertakes attacks in Iran. Their
leader Abdul Rehman Riki was hanged in Iran, after his chartered plane going
over Iranian air space was asked to land.
The latest
round of blasts and targeted killing in Karachi is attributed to two separate
factors: the genocide of Shias and ‘an attempt to free Karachi from the hostage
of MQM’. However, residents of Karachi categorically reject both the phenomenon.
Three of the
political parties PPP, ANP and MQM, which are also part of the ruling
coalition, are of the consensus that groups getting funds and arms from outside
are responsible for the killing in Karachi. Some of the critics even go to the
extent that a proxy war is being fought in Pakistan.
This article
was published in eurasiareview on
December 30, 2012