Gunmen kill 42 Shiites in northwest Pakistan
UNB
Publish: 22 Nov 2024, 05:15 PM
PESHAWAR,
Pakistan, Nov 22 (AP/UNB) - Gunmen opened fire on vehicles carrying Shiite
Muslims in Pakistan's restive northwest on Thursday, killing at least 42
people, including six women, and wounding 20 others in one of the region's
deadliest such attacks in recent years, police said.
The attack happened in
Kurram, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province where sectarian clashes
between majority Sunni Muslims and minority Shiites have killed dozens of
people in recent months.
No one immediately
claimed responsibility for the latest attack. It came a week after authorities
reopened a key highway in the region that had been closed for weeks following
deadly clashes.
Local police official
Azmat Ali said several vehicles were traveling in a convoy from the city of
Parachinar to Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, when gunmen opened
fire. He said at least 10 passengers were in critical condition at a hospital.
Aftab Alam, a provincial
minister, said 42 people were killed in the attack, and that officers were
investigating to determine who was behind it.
Interior Minister Mohsin
Naqvi called the shootings a "terrorist attack." Prime Minister
Shehbaz Sharif and President Asif Ali Zardari condemned the attack, and Sharif
said those behind the killing of innocent civilians will not go unpunished.
Kurram resident Mir
Hussain, 35, said he saw four gunmen emerge from a vehicle and open fire on
buses and cars.
"I think other
people were also firing at the convoy of vehicles from nearby open farm
field," he said. "The firing continued for about 40 minutes." He
said he hid until the attackers fled.
"I heard cries of
women, and people were shouting for the help," he said.
Ibne Ali Bangash, a
relative of one of the victims, described the convoy attack as the saddest day
in Kurram's history.
"More than 40
people from our community have been martyred," he said. "It's a
shameful matter for the government."
Baqir Haideri, a local
Shiite leader, denounced the assault and said the death toll was likely to
rise. He accused local authorities of not providing adequate security for the
convoy of more than 100 vehicles despite fears of possible attacks by militants
who had recently threatened to target Shiites in Kurram.
Shop owners in
Parachinar announced a strike on Friday to protest the attack.
Shiite Muslims make up
about 15% of the 240 million population of Sunni-majority Pakistan, which has a
history of sectarian animosity between the communities.
Although the two groups
generally live together peacefully, tensions have existed for decades in some
areas, especially in parts of Kurram, where Shiites are the majority.
Dozens of people from
both sides have been killed since July when a land dispute erupted in Kurram
that later turned into general sectarian violence.
Pakistan is tackling
violence in the northwest and southwest, where militants and separatists often
target police, troops and civilians. Violence in the northwest has been blamed
on the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group that is separate from Afghanistan's
Taliban but linked to them. Violence in southwestern Balochistan province has
been blamed on members of the outlawed Baloch Liberation Army.
End/UNB/AP/SU