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Islam,Terrorism and Jihad ( 17 Dec 2014, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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Peshawar Attack Stories: She Was Sitting On the Chair with Blood Dripping From Her Body As She Burned

 

By New Age Islam News Bureau

 A school child prays during a candle light vigil for the victims of a Taliban attack

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Peshawar Attack Stories:

Peshawar Attack: Taliban Attackers Shot Most Students Point Blank in Head

‘I Will Never Forget the Big Black Boots and a Body On Fire’

Pakistan School Kids Recall Narrow Escapes, Carnage In Taliban Slaughter

Will Chase Down Every Terrorist to Their Hideouts: Pak PM

Outpouring of Grief as Twin Cities Reacts To Peshawar School Attack

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Peshawar Attack: Taliban Attackers Shot Most Students Point Blank in Head

PTI | Dec 17, 2014

ISLAMABAD: Most of the students at the army-run school in Peshawar were shot in the head from point blank range by the ruthless Taliban suicide attackers, in one of the most gruesome attacks against children in recent years.

At least 132 students and nine staffers were killed when the attackers wearing Para-military Frontier Corps uniforms stormed the Army Public School on Warsak Road and started indiscriminate firing on them on Tuesday.

Quoting students, Dawn reported that the attackers scaled the boundary wall from the adjacent graveyard and started firing while moving towards the classrooms and auditorium.

"Most of the students have received bullets in the head," Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa information minister Mushtaq Ahmed Ghani said, giving out chilling account of the attack.

The parents, who usually wait outside the school to pick their children at the closing time, were seen crying outside hospitals.

Besides the parents and relatives, the people visiting the hospitals were also seen mourning on seeing the bodies and injured students in their blood-stained school uniform.

"I saw 17 bodies at the CMH (Combined Military Hospital) and all of them had received bullets in the head," said an eyewitness. He said that some of the bodies were mutilated.

Mohammad Zeeshan, a student of grade-7, told Dawn that he and many others were getting first aid training in the school hall when they heard the gunfire.

"Our trainer told us to lie down on the floor," he said, adding that in the meantime the terrorists entered the hall.

Zeeshan said the terrorists started shooting the students in their heads at a close range.

"They killed our class-fellows and then left us in the main hall. I received a bullet in my foot," he said.

Another injured student said that terrorists were firing on the students in classrooms.

"They also killed one of our teachers," he said.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/pakistan/Peshawar-attack-Taliban-attackers-shot-most-students-point-blank-in-head/articleshow/45547179.cms

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 Dozens of parents raced to hospital to comfort their children, after they were injured during the attack

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‘I Will Never Forget the Big Black Boots and a Body on Fire’

By Mehreen Zahra-Malik

Dec 17, 2014

One remembered the door to his classroom being kicked open by two gunmen who then opened fire without warning. Another recalled a gunman asking his group to recite verses from the Quran before gunning down his friends.

But the images that 16-year-old Shahrukh Khan replayed from a hospital bed in Peshawar told the full story of the terror and brutality that unfolded at the army school.

Talking to an AFP correspondent, Khan recalled seeing “big black boots” coming towards him before he was shot in both legs. Then, he woke up and crawled to the next room to witness this sight: “I saw the dead body of our office assistant on fire. She was sitting on the chair with blood dripping from her body as she burned.”

The teenager and his classmates were attending a careers guidance session in the school auditorium when four gunmen wearing paramilitary uniforms entered.

“Someone screamed at us to get down and hide below the desks,” Khan said. The gunmen shouted “Allahu Akbar” before opening fire —- “one of them shouted: ‘There are so many children beneath the benches go and get them’,” the boy told AFP.

Khan said he felt intense pain as he was shot in both his legs just below the knee but decided to play dead, saying, “I folded my tie and pushed it into my mouth so that I wouldn’t scream.

“The man with big boots kept on looking for students and pumping bullets into their bodies. I lay as still as I could and closed my eyes, waiting to get shot again.

“My body was shivering. I saw death so close and I will never forget the black boots approaching me. I felt as though it was death that was approaching me.”

Some of the gunmen also asked students to recite from the Quran before gunning them down, the Express Tribune reported.

“I was sitting in the corridor with 10 of my classmates when we heard firing,” the report quoted Aamir Ali, a second-year engineering student, as saying. “We immediately ran towards the classroom to hide but the militants chased us down and found us. They were dressed in Shalwar Qameez and the only thing they told us was: ‘Read the Kalima’.”

Ali said he was the only one to survive in the group of 10.

Kashan, a ninth grader who was injured in the attack, told an Express Tribune correspondent: “We were sitting in the hall and a colonel was giving a lecture when we heard firing from the back.”

The report quoted him as saying, “The sound of the firing kept moving closer when suddenly the door behind us was kicked down and two people started firing indiscriminately.”

The last thing he remembered was children and people falling to the ground.

Khalid Khan, 13, told Reuters that he and his classmates were in a first aid lesson in the main hall when two clean-shaven armed men wearing white clothes and black jackets entered the room.

“They opened fire at the students and then went out. The army doctor and soldiers managed to escape and we locked the doors from inside,” he said. “But very soon they came, broke the doors and entered and again started firing.”

He said many tried to hide under their desks but were shot anyway, adding that there were around 150 students in the hall around the time of the attack.

“They killed most of my classmates and then I didn’t know what happened as I was brought to the hospital,” said Khan, breaking down in sobs.

Others said the gunmen addressed each other in a language they could only recognise as either Arabic or Farsi – a possible testament to the Taliban’s network of hundreds of foreign fighters holed up with them in the remote mountains on the Pakistani-Afghan border.

Another student, Jalal Ahmed, 15, could hardly speak, choking with tears, as Reuters approached him at one of the hospitals.

“I am a biochemistry student and I was attending a lecture in our main hall. There are five doors in the hall. After some time we heard someone kicking the back doors. There were gun shots but our teacher told us to be quiet and calmed us down.

“Then the men came with big guns.”

Reuters, with other agencies

http://indianexpress.com/article/world/asia/i-will-never-forget-the-big-black-boots-and-a-body-on-fire/99/#sthash.mQth4bfS.dpuf

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 A Pakistani girl, who was injured in the attack, is rushed to a hospital in Peshawar

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Pakistan School Kids Recall Narrow Escapes, Carnage in Taliban Slaughter

Dec 17, 2014

It began like any other morning in Pakistan’s Army Public School in the north-western city of Peshawar. Students pored over their books. Teachers ruffled through their notes and gave lectures.

In an instant, the peace was shattered – gunfire, smoke and dead bodies strewn across the school’s halls and corridors, with crazed militants rushing from room to room shooting randomly at pupils and adults.

At least 130 Pakistanis, most of them children, were killed in the broad daylight attack on the military-run school on Tuesday, an assault lauded by Taliban insurgents as revenge for the killings of their own relatives by the Pakistani army.

Reuters interviews with witnesses showed most victims were shot in the first hours of the assault when gunmen sprayed the premises with bullets in an indiscriminate massacre.

It was possible that some were also killed in the ensuing gunfight with Pakistani armed forces who stormed the building.

The school in Peshawar, a Pakistani city on the edge of the country’s turbulent tribal belt, is operated by the army. Although it enrols some civilian students, many of its pupils are children of army officials, the Taliban’s intended target.

The assault began at around 10 a.m. local time (0500 GMT) as a group of nine militants, suicide vests tightly strapped to their bodies, burst into the building, according to witnesses. Some said they were wearing Pakistani army uniforms.

They bypassed the heavily guarded main entrance and slipped in through a less frequently used back entrance, the witnesses added.

Shahrukh Khan, 15, was shot in both legs but survived after hiding under a bench.

“One of my teachers was crying, she was shot in the hand and she was crying in pain,” he said as he lay on a bed in Peshawar’s Lady Reading Hospital.

“One terrorist then walked up to her and started shooting her until she stopped making any sound. All around me my friends were lying injured and dead.”

Suicide Bombings

At least 500 pupils aged between 10 and 20 years old were inside the building when the attack started. As the gunfight between the Taliban and Pakistani forces intensified, at least three of the militants blew themselves up, resulting in several charred bodies of bombers and victims.

A Reuters correspondent visiting the city’s Combined Military Hospital said its corridors were lined with dead students, their green-and-yellow school uniform ties peeping out of white body bags.

One distraught family member was given a wrong body because the faces of many children were badly burned as a result of the suicide bomb explosions.

Khalid Khan, 13, told Reuters, he and his class mates were in a first aid lesson in the main hall when two clean-shaven armed men wearing white clothes and black jackets entered the room.

“They opened fire at the students and then went out. The army doctor and soldiers managed to escape and we locked the doors from inside,” he said. “But very soon they came, broke the doors and entered and again started firing.”

He said many tried to hide under their desks but were shot anyway, adding that there were around 150 students in the hall around the time of the attack.

” They killed most of my class mates and then I didn’t know what happened as I was brought to the hospital,” said Khan, breaking down in sobs.

Others said the gunmen addressed each other in a language they could only recognise as either Arabic or Farsi – a possible testament to the Taliban’s network of hundreds of foreign fighters holed up with them in the remote mountains on the Pakistani-Afghan border.

Another student, Jalal Ahmed, 15, could hardly speak, choking with tears, as Reuters approached him at one of the hospitals.

“I am a biochemistry student and I was attending a lecture in our main hall. There are five doors in the hall. After some time we heard someone kicking the back doors. There were gun shots but our teacher told us to be quiet and calmed us down. “Then the men came with big guns.”

Ahmed started to cry. Standing next to his bed, his father, Mushtaq Ahmed, said: “He keeps screaming: ‘take me home, take me home, they will come back and kill me’.”

One nine-year-old boy, who asked not to be named because he was too afraid to be identified, said teachers shepherded his class out through a back door as soon as the shooting began.

“The teacher asked us to recite from the Koran quietly,” he said. “When we came out from the back door there was a crowd of parents who were crying. When I saw my father he was also crying.”

http://indianexpress.com/article/world/neighbours/pakistan-school-kids-recall-narrow-escapes-carnage-in-taliban-slaughter/99/#sthash.VeEihWpG.dpuf

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Will Chase Down Every Terrorist to Their Hideouts: Pak PM

Dec 17, 2014

ISLAMABAD - Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has vowed to eliminate every terrorist in Pakistan chasing them to their hideouts.

He made these remarks prior to leaving for Peshawar to participate in a meeting of the parliamentary leaders of all political parties in Peshawar today. The prime minister said that time has come to take to task all the elements who martyred our children. He said that Operation Zarb-e Azb has broken the backbone of the terrorists.

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/national/17-Dec-2014/will-chase-down-every-terrorist-to-their-hideouts-pm

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Outpouring Of Grief As Twin Cities React To Peshawar School Attack

Dec 17, 2014

ISLAMABAD/RAWALPINDI: Grief-stricken men, women and children braved the chill of the cold December night and gathered to hold a candlelit vigil outside the Army Public School Rawalpindi, to mourn the killing of over a hundred schoolchildren and staff members in a terrorist attack on a school in Peshawar on Tuesday.

Children were seen holding placards condemning the attack.

“I have come with my children to register our stand against terrorism and express our solidarity with the victims,” Mohammad Jawad, a resident of Chaklala Scheme-III, said.

An outpouring of grief was also witnessed at the National Press Club where civil society, government officials and large number of citizens came together to hold a candlelight vigil to mourn the attack.

“It is terrible that parents sent their children to school then waited outside to receive their dead bodies,” said human rights activist Farzana Bari.

Vigils held in Rawalpindi and Islamabad in memory of schoolchildren and staff who lost their lives

Save The Children’s advocacy and campaigns specialist Dr Irshad Danish said children should not be involved in any war and they should not be used for politics.

“The destruction of a school leaves a long-term impact on growth and healthy development of children in Pakistan. Schools should never be targeted, they must remain a place of safety and refuge,” he said.

End Violence against Women/Girls, an alliance of NGOs, representative Salim Malik said government and law enforcement agencies should learn from past experiences and ensure security for all sensitive areas.

Habiba Salman from Child Rights Movement (CRM) said when Malala Yousafzai was attacked, people came up with conspiracy theories to justify the attack however it has now become clear that people who have been attacking students are against education.

Protesters demanded that in light of the incident foolproof security should be provided to schools in the federal capital.

Blood donation camps were also organised at various places in Islamabad. United States Ambassador to Pakistan Richard Olsen donated blood at a camp organised at Pakistan Red Crescent Society (PRCS) to express solidarity with the victims. PRCS Chairman Dr Saeed Elahi said 250 bags of blood were dispatched to various hospitals in Peshawar.

Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (Pims) Vice Chancellor Dr Javed Akram told Dawn that following the incident 130 bags of blood and teams of doctors, nurses and paramedics were sent to Peshawar.

“All staff members at the hospital will wear black bands on their arms for three days to mourn the national tragedy,” he said.

Source: http://www.dawn.com/news/1151384/outpouring-of-grief-as-twin-cities-react-to-peshawar-school-attack

URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-terrorism-jihad/peshawar-attack-stories-sitting-chair/d/100539

 

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