Thousands of Pakistani tribesmen vow mosque revenge
Tuesday, 10 July 2007
KHAR, (Pakistan), July 9 (AFP): Around 20,000 Pakistani tribesmen vowed Monday to take revenge on President Pervez Musharraf for the siege of a radical mosque in the capital Islamabad, witnesses and officials said.
"We are ready for jihad!" cried the protesters-some of them armed with Kalashnikovs and rocket launchers-who rallied near Khar, the main town in the troubled Bajaur tribal district bordering Afghanistan.
Local pro-Taliban commanders told the gathering that there should be a holy war in return for the standoff at the Red Mosque.
The confrontation has so far left at least 24 people dead, according to the government, but the mosque's leaders say more than 400 students have been killed.
"We beg Allah to destroy Musharraf and we will seek revenge for the atrocities committed at the Red Mosque," militant commander Maulvi Faqir Mohammed told the gathering.
Mohammed had links to a hardline madrassa, or Islamic school, that was bombed by Pakistani forces in October 2006, killing around 80 people.
The tribesmen shouted slogans including "Death to Musharraf", "Death to America" and "Those who are friends of America are traitors."
"Musharraf should immediately end his atrocity against the mosque," Mohammed added.
Another mujahedin commander, Inayat-ur Rehman, told the tribesmen: "You must all get training for jihad because it is binding on every Muslim, just like prayers and fasting."
The gathering also passed resolutions in which they declared Friday a weekly holiday instead of Sunday, in accordance with Islamic custom, and demanded the closure of all music shops in the tribal district.
Militants blew up a security vehicle in Bajaur early Sunday, killing a policeman, and kidnapped four others in a separate attack.
Bajaur is a stronghold of the banned militant group Tehrik Nifaz-e- Shariat Mohammadi, which has close links to the Red Mosque.
Meanwhile: Unidentified gunmen shot dead a policeman and injured three other officers early Monday as they patrolled a restive town in northwest Pakistan, officials said.
Gunmen in a car ambushed the officers by spraying bullets into their vehicle at Mundan, on the outskirts of the northwestern town of Bannu, before fleeing, police official Dar Alik Khattak told AFP.
"An assistant sub-inspector of police was killed, and three other policemen were injured in the firing," he said.
Dar could not immediately say who was responsible, but witnesses said that the attackers appeared to be pro-Taliban militants, who regularly attack the police and the military.
On Sunday suspected Islamic militants shot dead three Chinese men and critically wounded another in Peshawar, the capital city of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province.
"We are ready for jihad!" cried the protesters-some of them armed with Kalashnikovs and rocket launchers-who rallied near Khar, the main town in the troubled Bajaur tribal district bordering Afghanistan.
Local pro-Taliban commanders told the gathering that there should be a holy war in return for the standoff at the Red Mosque.
The confrontation has so far left at least 24 people dead, according to the government, but the mosque's leaders say more than 400 students have been killed.
"We beg Allah to destroy Musharraf and we will seek revenge for the atrocities committed at the Red Mosque," militant commander Maulvi Faqir Mohammed told the gathering.
Mohammed had links to a hardline madrassa, or Islamic school, that was bombed by Pakistani forces in October 2006, killing around 80 people.
The tribesmen shouted slogans including "Death to Musharraf", "Death to America" and "Those who are friends of America are traitors."
"Musharraf should immediately end his atrocity against the mosque," Mohammed added.
Another mujahedin commander, Inayat-ur Rehman, told the tribesmen: "You must all get training for jihad because it is binding on every Muslim, just like prayers and fasting."
The gathering also passed resolutions in which they declared Friday a weekly holiday instead of Sunday, in accordance with Islamic custom, and demanded the closure of all music shops in the tribal district.
Militants blew up a security vehicle in Bajaur early Sunday, killing a policeman, and kidnapped four others in a separate attack.
Bajaur is a stronghold of the banned militant group Tehrik Nifaz-e- Shariat Mohammadi, which has close links to the Red Mosque.
Meanwhile: Unidentified gunmen shot dead a policeman and injured three other officers early Monday as they patrolled a restive town in northwest Pakistan, officials said.
Gunmen in a car ambushed the officers by spraying bullets into their vehicle at Mundan, on the outskirts of the northwestern town of Bannu, before fleeing, police official Dar Alik Khattak told AFP.
"An assistant sub-inspector of police was killed, and three other policemen were injured in the firing," he said.
Dar could not immediately say who was responsible, but witnesses said that the attackers appeared to be pro-Taliban militants, who regularly attack the police and the military.
On Sunday suspected Islamic militants shot dead three Chinese men and critically wounded another in Peshawar, the capital city of Pakistan's North West Frontier Province.