Militants attack airport in Pakistan; 9 killed
2012-12-15 22:44
Peshawar - Suicide bombers armed with rockets attacked the military side of a Pakistani
airport in the north-western city of Peshawar Saturday, killing four civilians
and wounding more than 30, officials said. Five militants also were killed.
Peshawar is on the edge of Pakistan's
tribal region, the main sanctuary for al-Qaeda and Taliban militants in the
country. The city has frequently been attacked in the past few years, but
Saturday was the first strike against the airport, which is jointly used by the
air force and civilian authorities.
The militants fired three rockets at the
airport, two of which hit a wall ringing the premises, said Mian Iftikhar
Hussain, the information minister in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, where
Peshawar is the capital. The third landed near a government building outside
the wall, Hussain said.
The militants also set off a car bomb
outside the wall around the airport, causing civilian casualties, said the
military.
The dead and wounded civilians from the
attack came from neighbourhoods located near the airport, said Umar Ayub, a
local hospital official. The 36 wounded included six women and three children,
and several people were in critical condition, said Ayub.
Five militants were killed in a gun
battle with security forces during the attack, said the military.
However, Zahid Khan, a police explosives
expert, said it appeared that three of the militants were accidentally killed
when the car bomb they used to try to break through the airport wall exploded.
Four of the attackers who were killed
were wearing suicide vests that have been defused, said the air force.
The air force side of the airport was the
target of the attack and authorities were searching the area for any remaining
attackers, said Defence Minister Naveed Qamar.
No air force personnel were wounded in
the attack and none of the service's equipment was damaged, the air force said.
Local TV footage showed people in the neighbourhoods
near the airport rushing for safety as the attack occurred. One car was damaged
in the attack and another was set on fire. A house was also damaged.
The airport was closed, and flights were
diverted to other cities, said Pervez George, a spokesman for the Civil
Aviation Authority.
No group has claimed responsibility for
the attack, but suspicion will likely fall on the Pakistani Taliban. The
militant group has been waging a bloody insurgency against the government for
the past several years and has attacked Peshawar many times in the past.
Also Saturday, police said a judge freed
a couple on bail who confessed to killing their 15-year-old daughter in October
by pouring acid on her after their other children pardoned them.
The girl's parents, Mohammad Zafar and
his wife Zaheen, said in a televised interview that they killed her because she
sullied the family's honour by looking at a boy.
They were freed from a jail in
Pakistan-administered Kashmir on Friday after their other children, who are
minors, said they forgave their parents, said police officer Tahir Ayub. The
children spoke through their guardian, who is also a relative, said Ayub.
The police officer said authorities had
evidence to prove the murder charge against the parents, but by law, their
children had the right to forgive them. The murder charge will likely be
dropped, said Ayub.
The girl's death underlined the problem
of so-called "honour killings" in Pakistan, where women are often
killed for marrying or having relationships not approved by their families or
because they are perceived to have somehow dishonoured their family.
According to the Human Rights Commission
of Pakistan, at least 943 women were killed in the name of honour last year.
The real toll is believed to be higher because many of the crimes go
unreported.
- AP