Khaleej Times

10 militants killed in Lahore gun battle

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lahore — Punjab’s police said on Saturday that 10 militants from Jamaat-ur-Ahrar, a faction of the Pakistani Taleban, died in a gun battle in the eastern city of Lahore, including a key suspect behind a February blast that killed 13 people.

The clash came just days after a suicide attack claimed by the Taleban on an army census team that killed at least six people and wounded 18 in Lahore, country’s second-largest city.

Scores of people have been killed since the beginning of the year in a series of attacks that have dashed hopes of an end to the violence of recent years and stepped up pressure on Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s government to improve security.

Police said that they were taking five militants to recover weapons and explosives on Lahore’s outskirts on Saturday morning when they were attacked by a group of about nine militants who freed the captives.

Police called for reinforcem­ents and encircled the area, challengin­g the militants to surrender.

“A gun battle ensued. When firing stopped 10 militants were found dead by the firing of their fleeing accomplice­s,” a spokesman for the Counter Terrorism Department in Punjab said in a statement.

Among those killed was a collaborat­or in a suicide bombing attack in February in Lahore, the statement said. The man had been arrested soon after the blast after he was spotted on security footage walking with the bomber.

Jamaat-ur-Ahrar claimed responsibi­lity for February’s attack in Lahore that left 13 dead, as well as an Easter Day bombing last year that killed more than 70 people in a public park in Lahore.

Separately on Saturday, another banned militant group, Lashkar-eJhangvi, claimed responsibi­lity for killing a member of a minority sect in Lahore. Ashfaq Ahmad, a retired veterinary doctor, was shot by a gunman on a motorcycle as he was travelling by car on Friday, less than two weeks after a prominent member of the sect was killed in Nankana, near Lahore.

Security forces in February killed around 100 militants after a Sufi shrine bombing in February that killed more than 80 in the southern province of Sindh.

The spate of attacks has ratcheted up tensions with neighbouri­ng Afghanista­n, which some Pakistani officials accuse of sheltering Pakistani Taleban militants. Afghanista­n’s government, in its turn, accuses Islamabad of aiding the Afghan Taleban, a charge Pakistan denies.

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