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335 including 310 female students killed in overnight operation in Lal Masjid: Cleric

Monday, 9 July 2007


ISLAMABAD, July 8 (XINHUA): Abdul Rashid Ghazi, deputy chief of Lal Masjid mosque claimed Sunday that 335 religious students were killed in the overnight operation launched by the Pakistani army Saturday, local TV channel reported.
Rashid said that 310 female and 25 male students were killed in overnight army bombing of the compound of Lal Masjid located in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad.
There was no official confirmation of Rashid's claim.
The bombing was expected to blow up sections of the walls and make holes in the compound so that the students who had been taken hostages could escape, an army spokesman said.
The five-day heaviest firing and explosions continued late Saturday night and the security forces made advancement towards Lal Masjid, Jamia Hafsa.
15 armored vehicles advanced from the rear side of the besieged building and opened fire, and the electricity of the areas near Lal Masjid was cut off.
Meanwhile: Islamic militants led by an Al- Qaeda-linked group shot dead a senior Pakistani army commando Sunday during fierce clashes with troops on the sixth day of a siege at an Islamabad mosque.
The military said Colonel Haroon Islam died after an operation to blast through part of the wall surrounding the fortified Red Mosque complex and free some of the women and children allegedly being used as human shields.
Chief military spokesman Major General Waheed Arshad said another army officer was injured in the fighting with the Islamists led by firebrand cleric Abdul Rashid Ghazi.
"Rashid Ghazi and his militants were responsible for the murder of a senior army officer," Information Minister Mohammad Ali Durrani told AFP. "The operation will continue and Ghazi has to surrender."
President Pervez Musharraf has warned the militants to give up or be killed. The military ruler also told the hardline students late Saturday to immediately free all women and children.
"I request these people to come out and surrender and I say this here, that they will be killed if they do not surrender," Musharraf, wearing his army uniform, told reporters in his first public comments on the confrontation.
Pakistani forces have held back from raiding the now bullet-pocked mosque but there have intense clashes around the perimeter, including early Sunday when giant blasts echoed around the city.
Ghazi told local television that 335 people inside the mosque were killed in Sunday's latest fighting but Durrani dismissed the claim, saying that only the soldier died and putting the toll for the entire siege at 20.
Concerns for women and children in the mosque grew after security officials said militants from a group linked to Al-Qaeda and to the murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl were now leading the mosque fighters.
Harkatul-Jihad-e-Islami provided shelter for Al-Qaeda militants who fled Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban. It has been linked to Pearl's 2002 beheading and a 2003 attempt to assassinate Musharraf.

Those inside the compound who wished to leave risked being shot by hardline students if they attempted to climb the wall, which is seven to eight feet (2.1 to 2.4 metres) high, officials said.
Ghazi said he and his followers had enough rations, arms and ammunition inside the compound to "fight for another 25 to 30 days and we will do that, God willing."
Ghazi, 43, also signalled his defiance by saying that he was telephoned by a man who claimed to have shot at Musharraf's aircraft Friday in revenge for the siege.
Security officials said earlier they were probing possible links between the mosque operation and the failed bid to shoot down the president's plane as it took off from Chaklala military airbase at Rawalpindi, near Islamabad.
Students affiliated to the mosque have irked the government since January with a Taliban-style anti-vice campaign, which has involved the abduction of several people they linked to prostitution, including seven Chinese.
Musharraf's tough stance has boosted his popularity after months of being embroiled in a crisis over his suspension of Pakistan's chief justice but he is now under pressure to end the six-day mosque siege.
Another report adds: Pakistan may rethink its strategy for dealing with the six-day siege of an Islamabad mosque after a top commando was killed, raising the official death toll to 24, a minister said Sunday.
The government has held back from a full-scale assault on the Red Mosque to protect women and children inside, but the situation is "tense" after the soldier's death early Sunday, Deputy Information Minister Tariq Azeem said.
"The government may have to rethink its strategy in the light of the sad martyrdom of a senior army official and the resistance that has been shown by what appears to be highly trained militants," Azeem told AFP.
The military said Colonel Haroon Islam died after an operation to blast through part of the wall surrounding the complex in a bid to let children and women out of the mosque.
Security officials say two militant commanders from a group linked to Al-Qaeda and to the murder of US journalist Daniel Pearl were now leading the mosque's fighters.
Azeem said 24 people had been killed in the standoff and about 50 injured people were still in hospital.
He said claims by the mosque's main cleric, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, that 335 people were killed in the fighting early Sunday were "laughable".