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		Eight Pakistani Shi'ites killed in 
		sectarian attack 
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		[October 23, 2014] 
		By Gul Yousafzai
 QUETTA Pakistan (Reuters) - Eight Shi'ite 
		members of Pakistan's ethnic Hazara minority were killed, and one 
		wounded, on Thursday, after gunmen opened fire on a bus in the volatile 
		province of Baluchistan, police said.
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			 No one immediately claimed responsibility. Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a 
			radical Sunni militant group, has carried out many gun and bomb 
			attacks on Hazaras in the past. 
 The men were returning from a vegetable market when gunmen 
			intercepted the bus.
 
 "Two gunmen boarded the bus and shot the men," police officer Imran 
			Qureshi told Reuters. All the victims were Shi'ite Hazaras, said 
			Asad Raza, another senior police officer.
 
 Television broadcast images of the bus surrounded by security 
			officials after the attack.
 
 The attack on the Hazaras was followed by an explosion targeting a 
			car used by security forces. A bomb planted in a nearby motorcycle 
			killed two people and injured 12, police said.
 
 "The target of the blast was a Frontier Corps vehicle patrolling the 
			area," said senior police officer Imran Qureshi.
 
 
			 
			Hundreds of Shi'ite Hazaras have been killed in bomb attacks and 
			shootings in southwestern Baluchistan in the last few years.
 
 Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has virtually turned Quetta, where the Hazara 
			community is concentrated, into a hunting ground for Shi'ites, with 
			leaflets shoved under doorways warning they are infidels deserving 
			to die.
 
 Given the history of attacks on Hazaras, police usually provide them 
			with security when they go shopping in the main fruit and vegetable 
			market in the city of Quetta.
 
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			"This particular group of Hazaras had not informed us about their 
			movement," senior police officer Aitzaz Goraya said in televised 
			remarks.
 As many as 200,000 Hazaras have moved to other cities or abroad, 
			Tahir Hussain Khan, an official of leading rights group the Human 
			Rights Commission of Pakistan, said this month.
 
 Shi'ite Muslims make up about a fifth of Pakistan's population of 
			around 180 million. More than 800 Shi'ites have been killed in 
			attacks in Pakistan since the beginning of 2012, according to Human 
			Rights Watch.
 
 (Writing by Syed Raza Hassan; Editing by Maria Golovnina and 
			Clarence Fernandez)
 
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