Gunmen attack Pakistan hospital in Lahore, kill 5

LAHORE, Pakistan, June 1 (Reuters) – At least four gunmen attacked a hospital in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on Tuesday morning, killing up to a dozen people and holding several hostage before escaping, a senior doctor told Reuters.

“They barged into the hospital building and opened indiscriminate fire,” said Javed Ikram, Chief Executive of Jinnah hospital.

He said at least 12 people were killed in the firing while some had been held hostage. However, other accounts put the number dead at five.

Senior city government official Sajjad Bhutta told Reuters, “They were four gunmen clad in elite police uniform, and entered the hospital building and opened fire. Then they ran towards the intensive care unit where their companion was being treated.”

Police guards fired back, he said, and they fled. One of them was wounded.

The five dead included three policemen, a woman and a private security guard, he said.

Dozens of people wounded in Friday’s attacks on two mosques of a minority religious community in the city were being treated in the hospital, which is a major institution in the city. More than 80 people were killed in those attacks.

The attackers were either trying to rescue or kill a wounded attacker from Friday’s assault who was being treated in the Intensive Care Unit of Jinnah Hospital, said Punjab police chief Tariq Saleem Dogar.

A Reuters reporter saw the bodies of four policemen.

“There are blood patches at the entrance of the hospital building,” a Reuters reporter said. “Pillows, biscuits and other food stuff and shoes are strewn on the floor.”

People and patients who were able ran from the hospital and television footage showed exhausted looking women climbing over security fences to escape.

The attackers themselves fled after the mayhem, officials said.

“They escaped from the scene,” Lahore commissioner Khusro Pervez Khan told Reuters. “We are in hot pursuit. We are chasing them. One of them was wounded.”

A witness told Reuters that a police commando team had stormed into the hospital. (Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore, and Kamran Haider and Zeeshan Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Jon Boyle and Chris Allbritton)

Gunmen attack Pakistan hospital in Lahore, kill 12

LAHORE, Pakistan, June 1 (Reuters) – At least three gunmen attacked a hospital in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on Tuesday, killing 12 people and holding several hostage, a senior doctor told Reuters.

“They barged into the hospital building and opened indiscriminate fire,” said Javed Ikram, Chief Executive of Jinnah hospital.

He said at least 12 people were killed in the firing while some had been held hostage.

Dozens of people wounded in Friday’s attacks on two mosques of a minority religious community in the city were being treated in the hospital, which is a major institution in the city. More than 80 people were killed in those attacks.

“We have surrounded the hospital and an operation is underway,” senior city government official, Sajjad Bhutta, said.

A witness told Reuters that a police commando team had stormed into the hospital.

One hospital official, who declined to be identified, said the gunmen killed one of the attackers from Friday’s assault who was being treated in the Intensive Care Unit. (Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore, and Kamran Haider and Zeeshan Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Jon Boyle and Chris Allbritton)

Gunmen attack Pakistan hospital in Lahore, kill 8

Pakistan, June 1 (Reuters) – At least three gunmen attacked a hospital in Pakistan’s eastern city of Lahore on Tuesday, killing eight people and holding several hostage, a senior doctor told Reuters.

“They barged into the hospital building and opened indiscriminate fire. Eight people have been killed and they have several hostages,” said Javed Ikram, Chief Executive of Jinnah hospital. (Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari and Kamran Haider; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Pakistan mosque attacks toll reaches 30, official says

At least 30 people were killed in attacks on two mosques belonging to a minority sect in the northeastern Pakistani city of Lahore on Friday, an ambulance service said.

Rizwan Naseer, the ambulance service’s director general, told Reuters 30 bodies had been taken to hospitals in Lahore, Pakistan’s cultural capital.

Gunmen opened fire shortly after Friday prayers and threw what could have been grenades at two mosques attended by Ahmadis, a minority sect in predominantly Muslim Pakistan.

(Editing by Chris Allbritton and Ron Popeski)

Blasts and gunfire rock mosques in Lahore – police

Gunmen attacked two mosques belonging to a religious minority group in Lahore in Pakistan’s northeast on Friday, government and police officials said.

There was no immediate information on casualties.

Gunmen opened fire shortly after Friday prayers weapons and threw what were believed to be grenades at two Ahmadi mosques in two residential neighbourhoods in Pakistan’s cultural capital.

(Reporting by Mubasher Bukhari in Lahore and Kamran Haider in Islamabad; Editing by Chris Allbritton and Paul Tait)

(For more coverage of Afghanistan and Pakistan, click http://www.reuters.com/places/afghanistan-pakistan)

Terrorists may use stolen Army vehicles to strike, warns Pak intelligence

Lahore, May 14 (ANI): Pakistan’s intelligence agencies have warned the concerned security authorities that militants could use stolen vehicles belonging to army officials to carry out terror strikes.

According to an intelligence input, a Toyota Corolla owned by Lieutenant Colonel Qazi Habibur Rehman was stolen from Islamabad on April 30, while a motorbike belonging to Major Muhammad Abdul Hassan was also stolen from Rawalpindi earlier this month, and that these vehicles may be used by militants to target important locations.

The intelligence report has been sent to all regional police officers (RPOs), city police officers (CPOs), district police officers (DPOs) and the Lahore capital city police officer (CCPO), The Daily Times reports.

Following the report, the Punjab Home Department has directed all concerned agencies to beef up security in and around all important establishments and government buildings in the province.

Security officials have also been asked to maintain a tight vigil and scan all vehicles entering or leaving the province from each entry and exit point. (ANI)

Terrorists may use ‘rigged’ vehicles to launch attacks in Punjab, Pak intelligence warns

Lahore, May 5 (ANI): Pakistan’s intelligence agencies have warned the concerned authorities that terrorists may use ‘rigged’ explosive-laden vehicles to target important establishments across Punjab.

According to intelligence inputs, militants may use Suzuki minivans to strike, The Daily Times reports.

Following the report, the Punjab Home Department has directed all security agencies to beef up security in and around all important establishments and government buildings in the province.

Security officials have also been asked to maintain a tight vigil and scan all vehicles entering or leaving the province from each entry and exit point. (ANI)

Deadlock over Indo-Pak water issue continues

Lahore, Mar.30 (ANI): The deadlock between India and Pakistan over the sharing of Indus river waters continues, as no breakthrough was made during the meeting of Indus Water commissioners from both countries.

Talking to reporters after a day long meeting in Lahore, Pakistan’s Indus Water Commissioner Jamaat Ali Shah said the visiting Indian delegation was told about Islamabad’s concerns over new dams being built by New Delhi on rivers.

Shah said his Indian counterparts assured that New Delhi would try to address these reservations.

“Continuous dialogues will help solve the water issues with India,” he said, adding that according to the 1960 Indus Water Treaty, India must inform Islamabad at least six months before finalising the construction of any dam project.

Pakistan had raised objections to India’s Chutak and Nimoo Bazgo water projects, saying the projects are affecting water flow in the River Indus.

However, Aranga Nathan, the Indian Indus Water Commissioner, countered Pakistan’s claims saying Islamabad was given ‘advance information’ regarding the construction of the Nimoo Bazgo Dam.

Nathan said India will respond to all queries raised by Pakistan, as it wants to resolve the long pending river water sharing issue quickly.

“We don’t believe in such moves and will try to remove all reservations of the Pakistani Government. I am sure about the success of dialogue and my team is ready to respond all queries raised by the Pakistani Water Commission to reach a consensus,” Nathan said.

Pakistan has repeatedly blamed India for its unsporting attitude on the water dispute.

Pakistan has opposed the construction of the Kishanganga hydropower project on the Ganga River in Kashmir, which it calls the Neelum. Pakistan has said the diversion of waters of the Neelum is not allowed under the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty, and it will face a 27 per cent water deficit, when the project is completed.

The reduced water flow in the Neelum would not yield the required results of the proposed 1.6 billion dollars Neelum-Jehlum hydropower project that has been designed to generate 969 MW of electricity.

Islamabad has said that India has almost completed a 22-kilometre long tunnel to divert the Kishanganga waters to the Wullar Lake in Jammu and Kashmir. (ANI)

Lahore, Mar.17 (ANI): Pakistan and Iran have inked a deal on the gas pipeline project in Istanbul, Turkey.

Lahore, Mar.17 (ANI): Backing all-rounder Shahid Afridi for the captain’s post, former Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chief Lieutenant General (retired) Tauqir Zia has criticised the National Assembly’s Sports Committee for making the match-fixing issue public.

Zia said the committee should not have made the matter public without naming the players involved in match-fixing.

It may be noted that PCB had announced a 15-man squad for the forthcoming ICC World T20 Championship in West Indies last week, but did not name the skipper for the tournament.

While Afridi is believed to be leading the race for captaincy, veteran players such as all rounder Abdul Razzaq and middle-order batsman Misbah-ul-Haq are also said to be in the fray.

Insiders said opener Salman Butt is also being considered for the top job. (ANI)

Pak gives up on hosting Davis Cup tie against New Zealand

Islamabad, Mar 12(AN): The Pakistan’s Tennis Federation (PTF) has given up hope of hosting its Davis Cup tie against New Zealand in July following a series of militant attacks in the country like last Friday’s suicide bomb attacks in Lahore.

Pakistan has seen an unprecedented rise in the number of suicide attacks carried out across the country and loss of life over the past couple of years, including the ambush of the Sri Lanka cricket team’s bus last year, leading to the cancellation of several sporting events.

PTF president Dilawar Abbas said he saw little chance of the International Tennis Federation (ITF) agreeing to allow Pakistan host the game.

“We had sent a letter to the ITF pressing them to allow us to host the tie on schedule as it is imperative for Pakistan tennis to play international ties at home,” The Daily Times quoted Abbas, as saying.

“But now while we are waiting for a response there is no doubt the situation has changed after the Lahore blasts,” he added.

The ITF has already moved Davis Cup ties against Oman and Hong Kong out of Pakistan after both the nations refused to play in Lahore. (ANI)

Blast rocks Lahore, several casualties feared

LAHORE, PAKISTAN: A car bomb slammed into Pakistani offices used to interrogate suspected militants on Monday, destroying the building and killing 11 people in the latest attack to strike Lahore.

More than 60 were wounded with people trapped under rubble of collapsed buildings when a car packed with up to 600 kilograms (1,300 pounds) of explosives struck an investigations unit in Pakistan’s second largest city.

There were scenes of panic as volunteers and rescue workers dug with bare hands under the collapsed two-storey building and a severely damaged Muslim seminary, searching for survivors and fearing the death toll could rise.

Pakistan pointed the finger at Taliban-linked militants out to destabilise the nuclear-armed country of 167 million and a wave of similar attacks has killed more than 130 people in the cosmopolitan city over the last year.

More than 3,000 people have been killed in suicide and bomb attacks across Pakistan since July 2007, a campaign blamed on Islamist militants opposed to the government’s alliance with the United States in the war on al-Qaida.

“It was around 8:15 (0315 GMT) when I heard a deafening blast which shook my house,” said Nasim-ur-Rehman who lives about 1.5 kilometres (one mile) from the scene of attack in the upmarket neighbourhood Model Town.

“When I rushed out I saw thick smoke billowing out,” he added.

The blast gouged a huge crater out of the ground, crumpled roofs and littered the streets with tree branches. Bulldozers and other heavy-lifting machinery worked to clear away the mounds of rubble, witnesses said.

Flying glass wounded passers-by. A woman and her daughter were among the dead in the city of eight million, and civilians who were wounded were mostly office workers or parents returning after dropping their children at school.

“It was a police special investigation unit that was targeted. A vehicle packed with explosives hit the building. The building was used to interrogate suspected terrorists,” Lahore city police chief Pervez Rathore told AFP.
Khusro Pervez, the top administration official in Lahore, said 11 people were killed and 60 wounded.

“I fear the death toll may rise. We believe there are still people trapped under the rubble,” he said.
Police said 30 to 50 people were in the building, used by police and intelligence agents, at the time of attack, which blew out a crater three metres (10 feet) deep and four to six metres wide.

“The blast also severely damaged a nearby religious school and houses. All schools have been closed in the area in order to avoid further losses or to prevent the possibility of another attack,” said Rathore.

Interior minister Rehman Malik blamed “hired killers who want to destabilise Pakistan” and pointed the finger at the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) faction holed up in the northwest of the country along the border with Afghanistan.

“In almost every blast there has been TTP involvement and they themselves have also claimed responsibility for attacks,” he added.

“The ammunition and weapons are coming from Afghanistan,” he alleged.

Ambulances raced to the area and the city’s Jinnah Hospital declared a state of emergency as casualties were rushed into wards and rescue workers used seismic sensors to search for survivors under the rubble.

Monday’s bombing in Lahore follows a recent decline in Islamist militant attacks in Pakistan after a significant hike in bloodshed in late 2009.

Pakistani officials had linked the reduction to the suspected death — still not confirmed — of TTP leader Hakimullah Mehsud and military offensives that have disrupted militant networks.

The military claims to have made big gains against Taliban and Al-Qaeda strongholds over the past year, launching major offensives in the northwestern district of Swat and the tribal region of South Waziristan.

Washington says militants use Pakistan’s semi-autonomous tribal belt to plot and stage attacks in Afghanistan, where more than 120,000 NATO and US troops are helping Afghan forces battle the Taliban militia.

Taliban may hijack airplanes to repeat 9/11, warns Pak intelligence

Lahore, July 9 (ANI): Pakistan intelligence authorities have warned that the Taliban may hijack airplanes to carry out a terror strike similar to 9/11.

Quoting from an intelligence report, a private television channel said that some detained Taliban operatives have revealed that their associates often use commercial airlines operating in the country to travel from place to another, and are on the look out to hijack the airliners to repeat the September 11, 2001 incident.

Intelligence agencies have also asked the concerned authorities to implement certain fundamental changes in the security procedures for commercial airliners to ensure safety of passengers and avoid any untoward incident, The Daily Times reports.

Airplanes have become more susceptible to be used for terror strikes ever since the 9/11 incident when four commercial aircrafts of a US airliner were hijacked by Al-Qaeda and deliberately crashed into the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon building in Washington. (ANI)

200 Sikhs leave for Lahore to mark Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s 170th death anniversary

Amritsar, June 21 (ANI): A group of 200 Sikh pilgrims left for Lahore in Pakistan on Sunday by special trains on the occasion of 170th death anniversary of Maharaja Ranjeet Singh who ruled the Punjab province for 40 years. He died in 1839.

Every year Sikhs visit Pakistan to pay their obeisance at the mausoleum of Maharaja Ranjit Singh in Lahore at the Gurdwara Dera Sahib on the occasion of his death anniversary.

The group is scheduled to stay in Pakistan for 10 days and visit Gurdwara Janamasthan in Nankana Sahib, Gurdwara Rohri Sahib, Lahore’s Gurdwara Dera Sahib, Gurdwara Sacha Sodha Sahib and Gurdwara Punja Sahib.

The main ceremony of Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s death anniversary will be organised at the Gurdwara Dera Sahib in Lahore between June 27 to 30.

Group leader Baldev Singh, M.A., said that after spending a day in Punja Sahib, we would go to Nankana sahib and other Gurdwaras. We would observe the death annivasry of Maharaja Ranjit Singh at Lahore.

Gurcharn Singh, one of the members of the group from Uttarakhand said, “We would not only mark the death anniversary but also try to visit the ancestral village.”

Born in 1780 in Gujranwala, Maharaja Ranjit Singh succeeded his father at the age of 12.

After several war campaigns, his rivals accepted him as their leader. He united the Sikh factions into one large state.

Ranjit Singh assumed the title of Maharaja on April 12, 1801. By Ravinder Singh Robin (ANI)

Lahore bombing must not shake Pakistan’s resolve: Expert

Washington, May 28 (ANI): An expert on South Asian affairs, Lisa Curtis, has said that Wednesday’s terrorist attack in Lahore should not shake Pakistan’s resolve to deal with the menace.

“The attack demonstrates that Taliban militants are capable of striking anywhere in the country. They seek to intimidate the Pakistani people and weaken Pakistani resolve in the fight against terrorism,” said Lisa Curtis, a senior research fellow at the Heritage Foundation’s Asian Studies Center.

“The Pakistani public now seems to understand the ultimate objective of the Taliban is to undermine Pakistan’s democratic institutions nationwide. They also see that the Taliban militants have no intention to lay down their arms. Pakistan has turned a corner in the fight against the Taliban in the last few weeks. The public and civilian leadership have finally galvanized behind the military to confront the Taliban on the battlefield,” she added.

“Any sign of retreat by the Pakistan military at this time would confuse the Pakistani public and revive international concern about stability in Pakistan,” Curtis concludes in her article. (ANI)

No evidence yet of Indian link to Lahore attacks: Malik

Rezaul H Laskar Islamabad, Apr 11 (PTI) Investigators had not yet found any conclusive evidence to suggest that India was involved in recent terror attacks on the Sri Lankan cricket team and a police training centre near Lahore, Pakistan’s Interior Ministry chief Rehman Malik said today. Distancing himself from Lahore police chief Pervaiz Rathore’s claim yesterday about India being linked to the two terror attacks, Malik said evidence is still being collected and investigations were still underway.

There is nothing “on record as yet” to suggest India’s involvement in the two attacks, he said. Malik said he had tried to speak to Rathore to find out on what basis he had made his claims but was unable to reach him.

Rathore “has been asked as to what basis he took the name of India,” Malik added. The terror attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore on March 3 was being probed by a judicial commission and officials were “not supposed to talk” on that issue, he told a news conference.

Asked about Home Minister P Chidambaram’s comments that the upcoming general election in India could be disrupted by terror attacks carried out by the Pakistani Taliban, Malik said Islamabad is prepared to extend full cooperation if New Delhi shares information in this regard. The two countries shared a common enemy, he said.

Pak sees foreign involvement in attack on Lahore police training camp

Islamabad, Mar.30 (ANI): Pakistan has pointed towards a probable foreign involvement in the attack on the police training camp in Lahore earlier today.

Pakistan Prime Minister’s Advisor on Interior Affairs, Rehman Malik said the attack has been carried out by the jihadi outfits and a foreign hand could not be ruled out.

“Today’s incident is part of terror wave exists in the country which begun from NWFP. This is an attack against country’s sovereignty,” The News quoted Rehman, as saying.

Rehman said that the attack was well planned and organized and it appears that the attackers were during the Afghan jihad.

He confirmed that at least ten militants were still present inside the police training facility.

Meanwhile, the death toll in the attack has risen to 25 and more than 90 police personnel have been injured so far.

Images of a suspected militant being nabbed by the security forces also appeared on government television, but there is no official confirmation about the report.

Curfew has been imposed in Manawan in Lahore with the gunbattle between the militants and commandos of Pakistan Army, Rangers still going on. (ANI)

Lahore church holds special prayers on Pakistan Day

Lahore, Mar.23 (ANI): The Cathedral Church here held special prayers on Monday on the occasion of Pakistan Day.

The Bishop of Lahore, Dr Alexander John Malik, prayed for the solidarity, progress and prosperity of Pakistan.

The Bishop greeted the nation on the occasion and said that the Pakistan Resolution is a beacon light for all nations of the world.

He said that the Pakistan Day is the day of renewing the resolution and we all have to resolve that we will work hard according to the thinking of the Quaid-i-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah to raise the image of Pakistan in the world. (ANI)

Pakistan to resist shifting of Davis Cup tie to Manila

Islamabad, Mar 13 (ANI): Pakistan has vowed to resist any attempt to shift their Davis Cup tennis home tie against Philippines to a neutral venue or Manila over security concerns.

The Philippine Lawn Tennis Association reportedly made the request in a letter to the International Tennis Federation (ITF) citing the March 3 militant attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team, as reason for shifting the venue.

Philippines is scheduled to play Pakistan in Asia Oceania Group II on July 10-12 in Lahore, The News reported.

Pakistan Tennis Federation president Dilawar Abbas said any attempt to shift the tie would be refused.

“We are writing a letter to ITF in which we would demand that the tie should be played in Lahore, Pakistan because the venue would also have accommodation for the players and there would be no risks involved,” Abbas told a foreign news agency.

“Cricket and tennis has lots of difference, the spectators are in hundreds as compared to thousands in cricket, and since it’s an indoor sport security would be easier and complete,” Abbas added.

An international squash event, due to be staged next month in Pakistan, was cancelled while New Zealand hinted it would not send its cricket team to Pakistan for the November-December series this year.

Last month Pakistan was forced to relocate their home Davis Cup tie against Oman to Muscat after their rivals raised security concerns. (ANI)

PCB fears sponsors deserting it in wake of Lahore terror attack

Karachi, Mar.10 (ANI): Cricket starved Pakistan is also likely to be snubbed by the sponsors after last week’s terror attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore.

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has expressed fears that major sponsors might backtrack from their deals with the board in the wake of the Lahore terror attack.

“Our major sponsors in Pakistan, who support cricket, are bound to rethink their sponsorship deals if we can’t have international cricket in the country,” The News quoted PCB’s chief operating officer Saleem Altaf, as saying.

It is unlikely that Pakistan will host any international cricketing event in the near future, and the sponsors who were already perturbed by a series of tour cancellations may ultimately bid a final good-bye to the game, as for them it is not financially feasible to put money into the game in these difficult circumstances.

Foreign teams have refused to visit Pakistan due to security concerns in recent times. First, it was Australia who called off a Test tour last April. Then the Champions Trophy was shifted. Finally, India also cancelled its tour to Pakistan in the wake of the Mumbai terror attacks.

Altaf said that Pakistan lost 20 million dollars in estimated revenues when India cancelled its tour.

“The PCB is now likely to incur increased costs for staging home series at neutral venues and finding suitable sponsors,” he said.

To stir-up interest of people and attract sponsors, the board has made participation of star national players in domestic events mandatory, but until international cricket returns to Pakistan, the PCB can not hope to revive its sagging accounts. (ANI)

Lahore attack on cricketers lays bare a Pakistan that is failing

Lahore/Peshawar/Washington, Mar.8 (ANI): The latest terrorist attack in Lahore, Pakistan, underlines the violence and corruption at the heart of a nuclear nation, feel experts
What comes out clearly from the grainy CCTV footage is the nonchalance of the attackers, which borders on the chilling.

One sequence shows a man arriving on a motorbike in a deserted street. Two others with guns slung over their shoulders mount the bike, which drives off. They look like men confident of not being caught.

Even in a country increasingly inured to violence, there is bewilderment over the Lahore attack.

Why would anyone target players from a country with which Pakistan is on friendly terms? And how did the gunmen get away so easily?
What is even more bewildering is the fact that a police station stands within half a mile of the Liberty roundabout yet no policemen emerged to help colleagues.

Nobody was more horrified by the lack of reinforcements than Mohammad Afzal, one of the police outriders.

“Bullets were bouncing on the road next to us,” he said in hospital after being shot in the eye and leg. “It was raining fire.”

Afzal had been issued with no weapon or flak jacket. “The attackers had such heavy weapons, we were overwhelmed,” he added.

“My colleague Tanwir was lying on the ground. I saw one of the gunmen calmly shoot him dead and then the terrorists all just walked away.”

Asif Mahmood, an interior decorator, witnessed one of many missed opportunities to give chase. He had just dropped his children at school when he almost collided head-on with a red Hyundai Santro.

Mahmood wound down his window to confront the offending driver but the words froze in his mouth.

“The car contained four young men, not older than 25, all holding guns,” he said. “When one of them pointed a gun at me I quickly reversed out of their way.”

As the car sped off, Mahmood ran to tell two policemen standing next to a police jeep. They did not pursue the vehicle but called their superiors.

The slow reaction of the police, combined with the coolness of the assassins, led many to suspect an inside job.

The fact is that the Pakistan police are under equipped, earn 70 pounds a month and have been the main victims of violence that has claimed 1,600 lives in two years.

Dr Ayesha Siddiqa, a military analyst, doubts it will be any different this time: “These people have local linkages, meaning they can disappear quickly. They might have linkages with law enforcement agencies. The politics is that people don’t want to admit this.”

Khusro Pervez, the Lahore police commissioner, confessed there had been “major security lapses”.

The search continues for those behind last week’s attack in Lahore. Most Pakistanis are resigned to the view that, as usual, the real culprits will never be found. (ANI)