Albuquerque Journal

Militant attack kills at least 41 police trainees

Up to 106 were wounded, among them trainees and paramilita­ry troops

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QUETTA, Pakistan — Gunmen stormed a police training center Monday in Pakistan’s restive Baluchista­n province and detonated explosive vests, killing at least 41 police trainees, authoritie­s said.

Baluchista­n’s top health official, Noor Haq Baloch, said at least 106 people were wounded — mostly police trainees and some paramilita­ry troops.

Major General Sher Afgan, chief of the paramilita­ry Frontier Corps, told reporters that the attackers appeared to be in contact with handlers in Afghanista­n. He said the attacker belonged to the banned Lashker-e-Jhangvi group, an Islamic militant group affiliated with al-Qaida.

Haq said many of the trainees were killed when the gunmen detonated explosive vests.

Baluchista­n Home Minister Sarfaraz Bugti said one of the attackers was killed by security forces and two detonated their explosive vests. He said security forces have completed their operation, but were still engaged in the cleanup process.

Bugti said at the time of attack about 700 trainees were at the base. He said more than 200 trainees were rescued.

In Monday night’s attack, between four and six gunmen opened fire as they attacked the hostel at the police training center in a suburban area of the provincial capital of Quetta.

“They were rushing toward our building firing shots, so we rushed for safety toward the roof and jumped down in the back to save our lives,” one of the police trainees told Geo television.

Footage shot by local television showed ambulances rushing out of the main entrance of the training center as fire engines sped in to put out fires set off when the gunmen threw incendiary devices.

Most of those being treated at city hospitals had gunshot wounds, although some sustained injuries jumping off the roof of the hostel and climbing a wall to escape the gunmen. Nearly all of the wounded were police; two were paramilita­ry troops, authoritie­s said.

Local television reported that two explosions were also heard, but it was not immediatel­y clear what caused them.

The attack came hours after gunmen shot and killed two customs officers, and wounded a third near the town of Surab, about 90 miles south of Quetta.

 ?? ARSHAD BUTT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Pakistani volunteer and a police officer rush an injured person to a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Monday after two separate attacks on a police training center.
ARSHAD BUTT/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Pakistani volunteer and a police officer rush an injured person to a hospital in Quetta, Pakistan, Monday after two separate attacks on a police training center.

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