Pakistan hangs 4 for school attack
EXECUTIONS WERE THE FIRST IN CONNECTION WITH THE DECEMBER 16 PESHAWAR ATTACK
Convicts linked to Taliban were involved in massacre of more than 130 pupils in Peshawar last year
Pakistan yesterday hanged four men linked to the Taliban’s massacre of more than 130 schoolchildren, with parents of victims saying they deserved “no forgiveness” as the attack anniversary approached.
The executions, which officials said were carried out yesterday morning at a prison in the northwestern city of Kohat, were the first in connection with the December 16 attack on an armyrun school in the northwestern city of Peshawar. The army has put the final toll at 151 killed, 134 of them children.
Survivors of the assault said they were happy to hear of the executions. But fathers of the victims who gathered in Peshawar yesterday said the hangings should have been carried out in public squares.
“All the nation wanted to see these animals hanged publicly so others would not dare follow their example,” said Abid Raza Bangash, an engineer whose 15-year-old son Rafique Raza Bangash was killed.
A Kohat police official named the militants as Maulvi Abdus Salam, Hazrat Ali, Mujeebur Rahman and Sabeel, alias Yahya. The army on Monday issued a socalled black warrant confirming their executions were imminent.
Their role in the massacre has not been made public. The gunmen were all reported killed by security forces.
The attack was Pakistan’s deadliest, and shocked and outraged a country already scarred by nearly a decade of extremism.
“The rest should be caught too, no one should be spared,” survivor Waheed Anjum, 18, said. Anjum, who was 17 at the time of the attack, was struck by three bullets, one in each arm and one in his chest.
“They shouldn’t have been hanged from prisons, they should have been hanged from squares,” his father Momin Khan Khattak added. “There is no forgiveness in our hearts after what they did to our children.”
Emotional meeting
Some 20 fathers gathered for an emotional meeting in Peshawar yesterday, with several in tears and many angrily echoing the call for the gunmen to have been hanged in public.
Parents of the Peshawar victims meet regularly, and yesterday’s gathering had been scheduled before news of the hangings broke.
The fathers were seeking to present demands to the government that their children be awarded Pakistan’s highest civilian honour, the Nishan-ePakistan. Other parents said the executions would deter future attacks.