Arab Times

Gunmen kill intel officer

IS claims responsibi­lity

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PESHAWAR, Pakistan, Oct 24, (AFP): Two gunmen on a motorcycle shot dead an intelligen­ce officer in northwest Pakistan on Monday, police said, in an attack claimed by the Islamic State group.

Akbar Ali, an intelligen­ce sub-inspector, was on his way to work and waiting at a bus stop near his home in Charsadda district when the gunmen opened fire, Suhail Khalid, district police chief, told AFP.

“Akbar Ali was hit by four bullets from the front and was killed on the spot,” he said, adding that the attackers used a 9mm pistol and fled the scene.

The attack was later claimed by the Islamic State group in a short statement posted on Amaq, its affiliated news agency.

Ganaphaty

Agent

“Islamic State fighters have killed a Pakistan intelligen­ce agent in the Sardaryab region ... of Pakistan,” it said, referring to the local area.

Pakistan’s military last month admitted for the first time that the Islamic State group had a presence in the country but said it had detained hundreds of its militants and prevented them from carrying out major attacks.

The army’s spokesman said its forces had foiled planned attacks by IS on embassies and Islamabad airport, but denied the group was behind an August attack on a hospital that killed 73, as it had claimed.

IS, which has struggled for traction in Pakistan in the face of competitio­n from well-establishe­d groups, gained its first toehold in January 2015 when six Pakistani Taleban leaders switched their allegiance from Al-Qaeda.

An attack on a bus in Karachi in May 2015 that killed 46 people was the first major incident officially claimed by IS in Pakistan.

Pakistan has been battling an Islamist insurgency since shortly after it decided to ally with the US following its invasion of Afghanista­n in 2001.

Violence has declined in recent years following a series of military offensives in the northwest border areas as well as concerted efforts to block the militants’ sources of funding.

own religious laws when it comes to marriage, divorce and property inheritanc­e.

The practice has faced repeated legal challenges in recent years, and Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t government has said it wants to replace it with a new uniform civil code applicable to all religious groups.

But that proposal has met stiff opposition from Muslim groups, who argue that it

Modi

But the remnants of militant groups are still able to carry out periodic bloody attacks, particular­ly in the northwest. Separately, gunmen on a motorcyle shot dead two coast guards and a civilian and wounded a shopkeeper in a remote southwest coastal town, local police station chief Chakar Baloch told AFP Monday.

The incident, also confirmed by provincial police chief Ahsan Mahboob, took place late Sunday in Pasni, around 650 kilometres (403 miles) southwest of Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochista­n where separatist­s demanding greater autonomy have been waging an insurgency for years.

A spokesman for the Baloch Liberation Army, Gend Baloch, later claimed responsibl­ity for the attack in a phone call to AFP.

In another incident, two children and another civilian were killed along with a soldier in firing across the border between India and Pakistan, officials from both sides said Monday, as tensions soar between the nucleararm­ed rivals.

Pakistan’s military said an 18-month-old girl and another civilian were killed on its side of the border in “unprovoked firing” by the Indian army.

Night

“Due to Indian unprovoked firing last night a civilian, Muhammad Latif of village Janglora, and a minor Haniya, age one and a half, embraced shahadat (martyrdom) while seven civilians were injured,” a military statement said.

The firing took place across the border between Indian-held Kashmir and Pakistan’s Punjab province in the villages of Harpal, Pukhlian and Charwah, the statement said.

Indian police said the late night heavy exchange of firing occurred in its RS Pura sector, killing an Indian border security guard and a six-yearold boy.

The Border Security Force (BSF) soldier died after he received splinters from a mortar shell fired by Pakistan rangers, Danish Rana, inspector general of police for the area, told AFP.

would discrimina­te against them.

“What is the crime of my Muslim sister that just like that over the telephone someone says ‘talaq’ three times and her whole life should be ruined?” Modi said at a rally in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

“No injustice should be meted out to our mothers and sisters in the name of religion or community,” he said in the televised speech.

Uttar Pradesh is India’s most populous state and 20 percent of its 200 million people are Muslim.

Modi, whose Bharatiya Janata Party is gearing for state elections there early next year, said it was his government’s duty to ensure the rights of Muslim women were upheld.

“We should not look at religion when it comes to respecting or protecting women,” said Modi.

“Election, votes, politics must be kept on one side: Muslim women must get their rights.” (RTRS)

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