Taliban
gunmen kill 17 in attack on Pakistan air force base
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[September 18, 2015]
By Jibran Ahmad
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (Reuters) - Taliban
gunmen stormed a Pakistani air force base early on Friday, killing at
least 17 people, most of whom were offering prayers in a mosque, a
military spokesman said, the deadliest such attack in years.
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The assault shows the Taliban retain the capability to mount
devastating attacks despite a military campaign and tougher
government measures against them following the massacre of more than
150 people at an army-run school last December.
Sixteen of Friday's victims were at morning prayers, and a captain
died leading the counter-attack against the raiders, 13 of whom were
killed, Major General Asim Bajwa said on Twitter.
Bajwa did not say if those killed in the mosque at the Badaber air
base, about 10 km (6 miles) south of the center of the northwestern
city of Peshawar, were civilians or military.
"Terrorists entered camp at two points. Encounter began
immediately," Bajwa tweeted. The attackers "were contained within a
close area. Meanwhile a group rushed to mosque, martyred 16 offering
prayers."
He posted pictures of some of the attackers' bloodied bodies in the
uniform of the paramilitary Frontier Constabulary, black traditional
Pakistani clothes known as shalwar khameez.
The attack took worshippers by surprise, said Mohammad Ikram of the
Pakistani Air Force, who was in the mosque at the time.
"We were offering prayers when we first heard the gunshots and then,
within no time, they entered the mosque where they began
indiscriminately firing," he said by telephone from a hospital bed
where he was being treated for gunshot wounds.
"They killed and injured most of the worshippers. I fell on the
ground. Then the gunmen went to other places in the base. After a
long time, we were shifted to the hospital."
A senior Pakistani military official said most of those in the
mosque when it was attacked were working with the air force.
"All the terrorists were wearing explosives-laden jackets and were
armed with hand-propelled grenades, mortars and AK-47 rifles," a
military official at the base, who asked not to be identified, told
Reuters.
Military officials were combing villages near the base for any
remaining militants, he added.
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"We proudly claim responsibility for the attack on Pakistani air
base," Taliban spokesman Muhammad Khorasani told Reuters, adding
that 14 militants had been dispatched to the base. "This base is
being used by fighter jets for bombing us."
Attacks by the Taliban have fallen about 70 percent this year,
following a military offensive against the militants' bases along
the Afghan border and the government's redoubled efforts to combat
them.
Despite the reduction in attacks, the militants still manage to
strike high-value targets. The home minister of Punjab province was
among 16 killed in a suicide attack last month.
In a separate incident in northwest Pakistan, eight civilians were
killed in a military strike in South Waziristan early on Friday, a
survivor told Reuters.
"The house next to my house was completely destroyed," said Naimat
Ullah, whose son was injured by flying shrapnel.
Neighbors who excavated the bodies had told him three young girls,
three men and two women died in the strike, he added.
(Additional reporting by Syed Raza Hassan in KARACHI, Saud Mehsud in
DERA ISMAIL KHAN and Asad Hashim in ISLAMABAD; Writing by Katharine
Houreld; Editing by Paul Tait and Clarence Fernandez)
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