Gunmen
kill 22 bus passengers in Pakistan attack
Send a link to a friend
[May 30, 2015]
By Gul Yousufzai
QUETTA, Pakistan (Reuters) - Gunmen
disguised as members of the Pakistani security forces killed at least 22
passengers on Friday night after forcing them off buses traveling from
the western city of Quetta to Karachi on the southern coast, officials
said.
|
The assault in the province of Baluchistan occurred in the town of
Mastung, around 40 km (25 miles) south of Quetta.
"Fifteen to 20 armed men in three pickup trucks and wearing security
uniforms kidnapped around 35 passengers," Sarfaraz Bugti,
Baluchistan's home minister, told Reuters.
He said the bodies of 22 passengers were later found around two km
away from the main Quetta-Karachi highway in foothills. Seven of the
assailants have been killed in an operation involving hundreds of
soldiers and police, he added.
The circumstances of the passengers' deaths could not immediately be
established and the motives of the assailants were unclear.
The attack will be a concern for the government of Prime Minister
Nawaz Sharif because it raises further questions about the
feasibility of a new economic corridor Pakistan wants to build with
billions of dollars of Chinese investment.
The much-vaunted project, announced when Chinese President Xi
Jinping visited Pakistan in April, envisages an eastern and western
route, with the latter passing from Gwadar port in the south through
Quetta and beyond.
RELATIVES PROTEST
Separatists have been waging an insurgency in Baluchistan, of which
Quetta is the capital, for more than a decade. They are demanding an
end to what they see as the exploitation of their resources by
people from other parts of Pakistan.
Islamist militants also regularly target civilians and the security
forces, and earlier this month at least 43 commuters were killed on
a bus in Karachi by a group that has declared allegiance to Islamic
State.
[to top of second column] |
All of the victims in that attack were Ismailis from Pakistan's
minority Shi'ite community, but one security official said the
Mastung attack did not appear to be sectarian.
Officials in Mastung said a major operation involving four
helicopter gunships and around 500 security personnel on the ground
was underway to hunt down the remaining assailants believed to be
hiding in mountainous terrain.
"The kidnappers and terrorists are surrounded by security forces,"
Bugti said.
In Quetta, where the bodies of the slain passengers were taken,
hundreds of people gathered outside the governor's house and staged
a protest over the lack of security in Baluchistan.
Among the demonstrators were relatives of 16 of the victims, whose
bodies were laid out in a line wrapped in cloth.
(Writing by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|