The National - News

Pakistan mourns massacre victims

Armed police still deployed on site after the rampage

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CHARSADDA // Pakistan observed a day of national mourning yesterday for the 21 people killed when heavily armed gunmen stormed a university in the troubled north-west. Armed police, some perched on the roofs of buildings, were still deployed at the Bacha Khan University campus in Charsadda yesterday morning.

Security forces remained on alert, with police foiling a bomb attack at a crowded bus station in nearby Peshawar. “We caught a man planting a bomb at Peshawar bus stand,” said senior police official Rokhan Zeb.

A bomb disposal team safely defused it, he said, adding that about 2,000 people were near the bus stand when the device was found. “A big disaster has been averted due to police alertness, had the bomb exploded it could have killed and wounded scores of people.”

Yesterday, about 1,000 people in a nearby village attended the funeral of a university caretaker killed in the Charsadda attack.

“I want to tell the terrorists, they can never win,” said Shah Hussain, father of the caretaker, Fakhr-e-Alam.

One of the wounded students, a geology major, died overnight and his funeral also took place yesterday.

The majority of the dead were buried on Wednesday. Seven other survivors were in stable condition and being treated in local hospitals. But despite Wednesday’s attack, defiant authoritie­s kept schools in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province open yesterday. “Militants want them shut down,” said provincial education minister Arif Khan. “We wanted to send the message that education will continue.” Only Bacha Khan University and its sister university Abdul Wali Khan in the town of Mardan were closed, he said.

Flags flew at half mast on government buildings, while a prayer ceremony was set to be held in Islamabad, where Pashtun students were also organising a protest. Pashtuns form the dominant ethnic group in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province. More than 200 sportsmen and women gathered at a sports complex in the capital to offer prayers for the victims.

“We are determined that the young generation of Pakistan will not bow down to the terrorists,” PSB director Akhtar Nawaz said.

Prime minister Nawaz Sharif has vowed a ruthless response to the massacre and ordered security forces to hunt those behind Wednesday’s attack.

Pakistan’s Human Rights Commission warned that the army cannot succeed “without a crackdown on institutio­ns and groups that train terrorists or help them otherwise”.

“We are not safe,” said Ajun Khan, who lost his only son Asfand in the attack on the Peshawar school.

Also yesterday , three people were killed when a rocket fired from Afghanista­n hit a shop in the south- west of the country, close to the Afghan border.

The rocket struck the Angoor Adda Bazaar in the South Waziristan tribal district, one of seven semi- autonomous regions where the Pakistani military has been battling Taliban and Al Qaeda-linked militants for more than a decade.

The second rocket fell in a secluded place.

The official said it was still unclear who had fired the rockets. The bazaar had been closed for six months after skirmishes between Pakistani and Afghan troops.

 ?? Mohammad Sajjad / AP Photo ?? Villagers offer prayers during the funeral of a victim killed in the attack on the Bacha Khan University in Charsadda, Pakistan this week.
Mohammad Sajjad / AP Photo Villagers offer prayers during the funeral of a victim killed in the attack on the Bacha Khan University in Charsadda, Pakistan this week.

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