The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China condemns deadly consulate attack

Four killed after gunmen stormed Chinese mission in Karachi, separatist group claims attack

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KARACHI: Four people were killed yesterday when gunmen armed with hand grenades and a suicide vest stormed the Chinese consulate in the Pakistani city of Karachi, officials said, with the attack claimed by a separatist group which branded Beijing ‘an oppressor’.

Pakistani authoritie­s said that security forces had secured the area after the attack, the latest assault on Chinese nationals in the country, where Beijing has poured billions of dollars into one of the largest projects in its massive Belt and Road programme.

China ‘strongly condemned’ the attack and asked Pakistan to take measures to ensure the safety of Chinese citizens and institutio­ns in the country, as well as the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) mega-project.

Three gunmen tried to enter the consulate in the southern port city, but were intercepte­d by guards at a checkpoint, Karachi police chief Ameer Sheikh told AFP.

“They were holding Kalashniko­vs. First, they hurled a small (grenade) and then started firing,” said Allah Bakhsh, a guard at a nearby house who witnessed the attack.

Police officials said two of their personnel were killed, along with a father and son from Quetta, the capital of Balochista­n, who were seeking Chinese visas and were caught in the crossfire.

At least one of the attackers was wearing a suicide vest which did not detonate, another senior police official said.

Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told reporters in Islamabad that ‘all the terrorists have been eliminated’, and that all 21 staff at the consulate during the attack had been taken to a safe location.

“Situation under control,” the military’s media wing added in a statement.

The attack was claimed by a separatist militant group from Pakistan’s southweste­rn province of Balochista­n, which is at the centre of the ChinaPakis­tan Economic Corridor, the major Chinese project in the country.

“We have been seeing the Chinese as an oppressor, along with Pakistani forces,” the spokesman for the Balochista­n Liberation Army (BLA), Geand Baloch, told AFP by telephone from an undisclose­d location, adding they were ‘destroying the future of Balochista­n’.

The BLA later emailed a statement to media in which it said the attack was ‘aimed at making it clear that China’s military expansioni­sm on Baloch soil will not be tolerated’.

It warned the Chinese to leave or ‘be prepared for continued attacks’.

The group is just one of the militant outfits operating in Balochista­n, Pakistan’s largest and poorest province, which is rife with ethnic, sectarian and separatist insurgenci­es.

Residents of the resourceri­ch province, which borders Iran and Afghanista­n, have long complained that it does not receive a fair share of the profits made from its mineral wealth.

Prime Minister Imran Khan said Friday’s attack would not undermine the PakistanCh­ina relationsh­ip, which he described in a statement as ‘mightier than Himalayas and deeper than Arabian Sea’.

Also on Friday a bomb hidden in a carton of vegetables killed at least 20 people at a marketplac­e in Pakistan’s northweste­rn tribal region. Dozens more people were wounded, with fears the toll could rise.

China, one of Pakistan’s closest allies, has poured billions into the South Asian country in recent years as part of CPEC, a massive infrastruc­ture project that seeks to connect its western province Xinjiang with the Arabian Sea port of Gwadar in Balochista­n.

The project is one of the largest in Beijing’s ‘One Belt One Road’ initiative, comprising a network of roads and sea routes involving 65 countries.

Pakistan sees the project as a ‘gamechange­r’, but it presents an enormous challenge in a country plagued by weak institutio­ns, endemic corruption and a range of insurgenci­es in areas slated to host the corridor.

The subject of economic dividends from CPEC is extremely sensitive in some of those areas – particular­ly in Balochista­n.

Since the beginning of the project militants have repeatedly attacked constructi­on sites, blowing up numerous gas pipelines and trains, and targeted Chinese workers.

In August this year three Chinese nationals were among six wounded in a suicide attack on a bus transporti­ng Chinese engineers working in Balochista­n, in an attack that was also claimed by the BLA.

The Pakistani military has been targeting insurgenci­es in the province since 2004, and has been repeatedly accused by internatio­nal rights groups of abuses there.

Islamabad regularly accuses its eastern neighbour India of funding and arming Baloch separatist­s, and of targeting developmen­t projects in the province, particular­ly CPEC.

India’s foreign ministry swiftly condemned Friday’s attack in a statement, saying: “There can be no justificat­ion whatsoever for any act of terrorism”. — AFP

They were holding Kalashniko­vs. First, they hurled a small (grenade) and then started firing. Allah Bakhsh, a guard who witnessed the attack

 ??  ?? Paramilita­ry forces and police are seen during an attack on the Chinese consulate, where blasts and shots are heard, in Karachi, Pakistan. — Reuters photo
Paramilita­ry forces and police are seen during an attack on the Chinese consulate, where blasts and shots are heard, in Karachi, Pakistan. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Smoke rises from the Chinese consulate after an attack by gunmen in Karachi. — Reuters photo
Smoke rises from the Chinese consulate after an attack by gunmen in Karachi. — Reuters photo
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