Pakistan parents mourning |
A shocked Pakistan on Wednesday began burying 132 students
killed in a grisly attack on their school by Taliban militants that has heaped
pressure on the government to do more to tackle the insurgency.
People across the country lit candles and staged vigils as
parents bade final farewells to their children during mass funerals in and
around Peshawar, the volatile city on the edge of Pakistan's lawless tribal
belt where the school was located.
Grief mixed with anger as people looked to the authorities -
long accused of not being tough enough on extremists - to stem spiraling
violence in a nation which has become a safe haven for al Qaeda-linked groups.
At a vigil in the capital Islamabad, Fatimah Khan, 38, said
she was devastated by the atrocity.
"I don't have words for my pain and anger," she
said. "They slaughtered those children like animals."
Sixteen-year-old Naba Mehdi, who attends the Army School in
the nearby garrison city of Rawalpindi, had a message of defiance for the
Taliban.
"We're not scared of you," she said. "We will
still study and fight for our freedom. This is our war."
When asked what the government should do, her mother
interrupted: "Hang them. Hang them all without mercy."
In apparent response to public opinion after what may have
been the deadliest militant attack in Pakistani history, Prime Minister Nawaz
Sharif announced he had lifted a moratorium on the death penalty.
The focus was also on Army Chief Raheel Sharif as he visited
Afghanistan, where two sides whose relationship is strained after decades of
mistrust were to discuss how to crack down on militants hiding on their common
border.
Pakistanis may be used to almost daily attacks on security
forces but an outright assault on children stunned the country, prompting
commentators to call for a tough military response.
In all, 148 people were killed in the attack on the
military-run Army Public School, according to the army.
Some of the slain Pakistan students |
The school's sprawling grounds were all but deserted on
Wednesday, with a few snipers manning the roofs of its pink brick-and-stone
buildings. Army vehicles and soldiers wearing face masks and carrying rifles
were deployed by the entrance.
BLOOD AND BODY PARTS
A Reuters tour of the school revealed a place shattered by
hours of fighting, its floor slick with blood and walls pockmarked with bullet
holes. Classrooms were filled with abandoned school bags, mobile phones and
broken chairs.
One wall was smashed where a suicide bomber blew himself up,
blood splattered across it. His body parts were piled nearby on a white cloth.
The air was thick with the smell of explosives and flesh.
A day after the attack, Peshawar appeared subdued as people
digested the tragedy. More details of the well-organized attack emerged as
witnesses came forward with accounts.
"The attackers came around 10:30 a.m. on a pick-up
van," said Issam Uddin, a 25-year-old school bus driver.
"They drove it around the back of the school and set it
on fire to block the way. Then they went to Gate 1 and killed a soldier, a
gatekeeper and a gardener. Firing began and the first suicide attack took
place."
Sharif has announced three days of mourning, but people's
anxiety focused on what the authorities can do to protect them.
Sharif came to power last year promising to negotiate peace with
the Taliban, but those efforts failed, weakening his position and prompting the
army to launch an air-and-ground operation against insurgents along the Afghan
border.
The military staged more air strikes there late on Tuesday
in response to the school attack, security sources said, but it was unclear
what the target was.
"GOOD AND BAD" TALIBAN
Despite the well-publicised crackdown, the military has been
accused of being too lenient towards militants who critics say are used to
carry out the army's bidding in places like the disputed Kashmir region and
Afghanistan.
The military denies the accusations.
"People will have to stop equivocating and come
together in the face of national tragedy," said Sherry Rehman, a former
ambassador to the United States and an opposition politician.
The Pakistani Taliban, who are fighting to impose strict
Islamic rule in Pakistan, are holed up in mountains straddling the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border.
They are allied with the Afghan Taliban as well as al Qaeda
and other foreign fighters, and Pakistan has long accused Afghanistan of not
doing enough to crack down on their bases.
Afghanistan, for its part, blames Pakistan for allowing
militant groups such as the Afghan Taliban and Haqqani Network to operate
freely on its territory.
Pakistan's Dawn newspaper quoted a source saying the
militants were acting on direct orders from their handlers in Afghanistan and
that prominent Taliban commander Umar Naray was the ultimate mastermind of the
attack.
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