Pakistan University Shooting Kills at Least 20 (Part II)

anatta

100% recycled karma
Armed militants stormed a university in volatile northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, killing at least 20 people and wounding dozens a little more than a year after the massacre of 134 students at a school in the area, officials said.

A senior Pakistani Taliban commander claimed responsibility for the assault in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, but an official spokesman later denied involvement, calling the attack "un-Islamic".

The violence nevertheless shows that militants retain the ability to launch attacks, despite a country-wide anti-terrorism crackdown and a military campaign against their strongholds along the lawless border with Afghanistan.

A security official said the death toll could rise to as high as 40 at Bacha Khan University in the city of Charsadda. The army said it had concluded operations to clear the campus six hours after the attack began, and that four gunmen were dead.

A spokesman for rescue workers, Bilal Ahmad Faizi, said 19 bodies had been recovered including students, guards, policemen and at least one teacher, named by media as chemistry professor Syed Hamid Husain. Husain reportedly shot back at the gunmen with a pistol to allow his students to flee.

Many of the dead were apparently shot in the head execution-style, TV footage showed.

The militants, using the cover of thick, wintry fog, scaled the walls of the university on Wednesday morning before entering buildings and opening fire on students and teachers in classrooms and hostels, police said.

Students told media they saw several young men wielding AK-47 guns storming the university housing where many students were sleeping.

"They came from behind and there was a big commotion," an unnamed male student told a news channel from a hospital bed in Charsadda's District Hospital. "We were told by teachers to leave immediately. Some people hid in bathrooms."

Thirty five of the wounded remain in hospital, a local police official said late on Wednesday.

The gunmen attacked as the university prepared to host a poetry recital on Wednesday afternoon to commemorate the death anniversary of Khan Abdul Ghaffar Khan, a popular ethnic Pashtun independence activist after whom the university is named.

Vice Chancellor Fazal Rahim told reporters that the university teaches over 3,000 students and was hosting an additional 600 visitors for the poetry recital.

Umar Mansoor, a senior Pakistani Taliban commander involved in the December 2014 attack on the army school in Peshawar, claimed responsibility for the Charsadda assault and said it involved four of his men.

He told Reuters by telephone the university was targeted because it was a government institution that supported the army.

However, later in the day, official Taliban spokesman Muhammad Khorasani issued a written statement disassociating the militants from the attack, calling it un-Islamic.

"Youth who are studying in non-military institutions, we consider them as builders of the future nation and we consider their safety and protection our duty," the statement said

The reason for the conflicting claims was not immediately clear. While the Taliban leadership is fractured, Mansoor is believed to remain loyal to central leader Mullah Fazlullah.

The Pakistani Taliban are fighting to topple the government and install a strict interpretation of Islamic law. They are loosely allied with the Afghan Taliban who ruled most of Afghanistan until they were overthrown by U.S.-backed military action in 2001.

By afternoon on Wednesday, the military said all four gunmen had been killed.

"The operation is over and the university has been cleared," Pakistan army spokesman General Asim Bajwa said.

A security official close to the operation said he had seen the four gunmen's bodies riddled with bullets. He said none of the gunmen was wearing a suicide vest, but they carried guns and grenades.


RUMORS OF ATTACK

Television footage showed military vehicles packed with soldiers driving into the campus as helicopters buzzed overhead and ambulances lined up outside the main gate while anxious parents consoled each other.

Shabir Khan, a lecturer in the English department, said he was about to leave his university housing for the department when firing began.

"Most of the students and staff were in classes when the firing began," Khan said.

Several schools had closed early at the weekend around Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, after rumors circulated of a possible attack.

That area has been on edge since the December 2014 massacre by six gunmen in Peshawar.

Pakistan, which has suffered from years of jihadist militant violence, has killed and arrested hundreds of suspected militants under a major crackdown launched afterwards.

The Peshawar school attack was seen as having hardened Pakistan's resolve to fight militants along its lawless border with Afghanistan.

"We are determined and resolved in our commitment to wipe out the menace of terrorism from our homeland," Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said in a statement after Wednesday's attack.
Militants storm Pakistan university, kill at least 20
 
death cults don't last forever

most people are mostly good


the population tires of hate and violence
 
well maybe you guys should have though of that before you killed the shit cork in the bottle of bees
 
NW Tribal areas are where the TTP Taliban are concentrated
tumblr_ld9oesjieX1qeyhc2.gif


Pakistan braces for a long and deadly war in tribal areas on Afghan border
2/10/15
nearly 800 Pakistani troops who have been wounded since the military launched its North Waziristan operation in June. Two hundred nineteen have been killed, adding to a toll of about 4,400 Pakistani troops who have lost their lives battling Islamist militants in northwestern Pakistan since 2002. That’s nearly twice as many troops as the United States lost in the same period in neighboring Afghanistan.

current plans call for keeping as many as 170,000 soldiers — almost one-third of the entire force — near the Afghan border through at least 2019.

Such an extended presence would allow the military to safeguard recent gains in North Waziristan, which has long served as a base for al-Qaeda, while still being able to quickly respond to emerging threats, including efforts by Islamic State militants to gain a foothold in the region.

“We are now basically fighting for the defense of the subcontinent,” the official said. “It’s not only for Pakistan; it’s for all of South Asia. With the withdrawal of NATO from Afghanistan, the entire burden has fallen on Pakistan.”
 
well maybe you guys should have though of that before you killed the shit cork in the bottle of bees

Lol, yeah because there was no violence and killing in the world or middl east prior to 2003. History books are your friend Desh.
 
Pakistan is in Asia...the "dictatorship" was the unwanted Taliban in Kabul. Pakistan is a democracy.
 
Pakistan holds national day of mourning after Bacha Khan university massacre
http://www.theguardian.com/world/20...mourning-after-bacha-khan-university-massacre

Pakistan will observing a day of national mourning on Thursday for the 21 people killed when heavily armed gunmen stormed a university in the troubled northwest of the country.

Flags will fly at half-mast on all government buildings inside and outside the country, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s office said, while a prayer ceremony will be held in the capital Islamabad.

indian-children_121814090906.gif


Sharif has vowed a “ruthless” response to the massacre and ordered security forces to hunt down those behind Wednesday’s attack on the Bacha Khan university in Charsadda, where students were targeted with grenades and automatic weapons.

The assault bore a chilling resemblance to a 2014 massacre at a school in nearby Peshawar which shocked the country and prompted an escalation of a national crackdown on extremism.

Security forces killed all four gunmen in the university attack, which was claimed by a Pakistani Taliban faction but branded “un-Islamic” by the umbrella group’s leadership, who also vowed to hunt down those responsible.

Among those who died was assistant chemistry professor Syed Hamid Husain who was lauded for challenging the gunmen and firing at them with his pistol while his terrified students raced for cover.

The majority of victims were laid to rest late on Wednesday according to Muslim tradition, including Husain who was buried in his home village of Swabi, 80km east of Charsadda.

“He would always help the students and he was the one who knew all their secrets because they would share all their problems with him,” 22-year-old geology student Waqar Ali told AFP.

“He was referred to by students as ‘The Protector’.”

The majority of the student victims died at a hostel for young men where security forces also cornered the four attackers.

Pools of blood and overturned furniture could be seen inside the hostel, while in a back alley outside, an old wooden plaque on the wall proclaimed: ‘Heroes die young’.

Meanwhile the bodies of militants, bloodied and with their clothes torn, were unceremoniously dumped on the floor of a truck before being taken away from the scene.

The assault brought back memories of the 2014 atrocity, in which gunmen from the same Taliban faction slaughtered more than 150 people at an army-run school in nearby Peshawar.

The majority of those victims were children, and their relatives held a candlelight vigil in Peshawar late Wednesday for those slain in the latest attack.

The strike on the army school united Pakistanis, already scarred by a decade of assaults, in shock and outrage and prompted a government and military-led crackdown on extremism.

Security palpably improved in 2015, which saw the least number of deaths from militant violence since the formation of the Pakistani Taliban in 2007. But critics have repeatedly warned the government is not taking long-term steps to tackle the underlying problems of extremism.

“We understand their pain,” Ajun Khan, who lost his only son Asfand in the attack on the Army Public School, told AFP of the survivors of Wednesday’s assault.

“We are not safe, even parents do not feel safe,” he said.

The Bacha Khan attack, which Amnesty International said could be branded a war crime, earned global condemnation, including from UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and from neighbouring India.

“It is particularly appalling that these terrorists continue to attack educational institutions, targeting Pakistan’s future generations,” said a US State Department spokesman.

Sharif said in a statement from Switzerland, where he is attending the Davos forum, that he was “personally monitoring” the situation.

“The countless sacrifices made by our countrymen will not go in vain Inshallah,” he said.

“The entire nation is united and one against terrorism.”
 
Not real familiar with human history or the Middle East are you?
Wacko....that's just a simply dumb comment. Desh is actually correct on this point. Civilized society, of any stripe, won't for long tolerate extremist attacking the very institutions of civilization. You think this is unique to the middle east (by the way Pakistan may be Islamic but are not in the middle east in case you've looked at a map lately)?

In case you haven't noticed more Americans have died in school shootings in the last 20 years than have been killed in Pakistan school shootings over that time.
 
US kids aren't targeted by an insurgency..it's not international in scope.

What happens in Pakistan, effects what happens in Afghanistan,and they both effected by what happens in Waziristan - the singular most
breeding ground for AQ Core. Which was the most dangerous group before the advent of ISIS..which is now a force in AfPak

None of this is good. It very much looks like the Taliban are going to re-conquest Kabul; while Pakistan is in a new internal struggle..
 
Wacko....that's just a simply dumb comment. Desh is actually correct on this point. Civilized society, of any stripe, won't for long tolerate extremist attacking the very institutions of civilization. You think this is unique to the middle east (by the way Pakistan may be Islamic but are not in the middle east in case you've looked at a map lately)?

In case you haven't noticed more Americans have died in school shootings in the last 20 years than have been killed in Pakistan school shootings over that time.

Is that your strawman spin for today....only consider 'school' shootings ?

These barbarians have been killing each other for 1500 years and now they have declared war on the west....especially the US.....
They not only murder innocents but how many ancient and irreplaceable religious and cultural sites have they destroyed recently....

and the world, for the most part sits and watches with only meager and half hearted attempts to stop them.....

I'm surprised Mott, you usually face reality and desh has never been right about anything.
 
Back
Top