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Sectarian target killings in Karachi

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Five more killed in Karachi target killings

KARACHI: At least five people were killed in different incidents of target killings during the past 12 hours in Karachi, DawnNews reported.

The areas of Lyari, Qaidabad, Pak Colony, New Karachi and Nazimabad were tense after a fresh wave of targeted attacks in the city.

The victims were associated with religious and political organisations.

Police said the killings are part of a conspiracy to spark sectarian unrest in the city.

Police sources say three suspects have been arrested in this regard and an investigation was underway. — DawnNews
 
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Five wounded, vehicles, shops torched in Godhra violence By Our Staff Reporter
Friday, 11 Jun, 2010 An official at the Central Fire Station said they had initial reports of two vehicles, two shops and a house being set on fire in the Godhra Camp violence. - Online Photo. Metropolitan
Malik assures cooperation for maintaining peace in Karachi Malik assures cooperation for maintaining peace in Karachi KARACHI: Tension gripped the Godhra Camp locality in New Karachi on Thursday after an armed clash between two groups belonging to different schools of thought over an old dispute, police said.

The hour-long shooting left some five people with bullet wounds. Two vehicles with an abandoned house and two shops were also torched as the law-enforcers chose not to intervene.

“The exact reason behind the fresh violence is not clear, but it’s a dispute among people of the same family, who are followers of different schools of thought,” said an official at the New Karachi Industrial Area police station. “A few months ago a man was gunned down over the dispute within the family allegedly by the followers of the rival school of thought. So the family dispute turned into a sectarian issue for both parties.”

An official at the Central Fire Station said they had initial reports of two vehicles, two shops and a house being set on fire in the Godhra Camp violence.

However, some three fire tenders rushed to the affected area returned without performing their job after they were attacked by the charged youths in the area.“But the situation turned normal after half an hour and we provided security to the firefighters, who later completed their task,” said the police official.

---------- Post added at 05:19 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:19 PM ----------

Ancholi tense after clashes
Friday, 11 Jun, 2010 Police and Rangers were stationed in large numbers in the area. — Photo by AFP Metropolitan
Five more killed in Karachi target killings Five more killed in Karachi target killings KARACHI: The city’s Ancholi area remained tense on Friday, a day after a youth was killed there. Police and Rangers were stationed in large numbers in the area.

The youth's funeral prayers were said after the Friday prayers.

Shops and businesses in the area were closed for mourning.

Separately, the area of Godhra was also tense after Thursday's clashes between two rival groups. Police and Rangers were stationed in the area in large numbers.

Seven shops and three houses were torched during Thursday's clashes between the groups. — DawnNews
 
What is going on in Khi now we just had a wave of ethinic killings now there is sectarian killings .

HELO GOP ............. are you there !!?????
 
Two men shot dead in Lyari By Our Staff Reporter
Friday, 11 Jun, 2010 KARACHI, June 10: Two men were shot dead in Lyari on Thursday, officials said.

While most parts of the town remained calm, Ali Mohammad Mohalla and Baloch Mohalla emerged as the centre of a weeklong stand-off between law-enforcers and alleged gangsters associated with the Ghaffar Zikri group.

Police claimed major success by forcing out the criminals from Ali Mohammad Mohalla – one of the most affected parts of the gang warfare and a stronghold of Ghaffar Zikri.

“The body of a young man was found in Liaquat Colony in the morning,” said an official at the Kalri police station.

“While the body has not been unidentified nor has the motive behind the killing been ascertained yet, we have reason to believe that this particular murder has nothing to do with the gang warfare.”

Later during the day, a man with bullet wounds in his body reported at the Civil Hospital Karachi (CHK) from Ali Mohammad Mohalla. The man succumbed to his wounds during treatment. However, hospital officials and the area police remained unable to determine his identity.

The police claimed major success after they ‘cleared’ Ali Mohammad Mohalla of gangsters despite the fact that no arrest had been made during the operation.

“The gangsters are on the run and majority of them have already left the area,” said SSP Khadim Hussain Rind of Lyari Town.

“We have raided several hideouts in Ali Mohammad Mohalla and the area is clear now. A large quantity of drugs has been seized during our search operation.”

Though the police authorities said the presence of nearly 300 police commandos backed by a heavy contingent of Rangers personnel and 17 armoured personnel carriers helped maintain peace in the area, residents said heavy gunfire mainly at night had become a routine.

“At least in Eidu Lane and Ali Mohammad Mohalla, there has been no law-and-order problem,” claimed Zafar Baloch of the People’s Peace Committee — a lately formed socio-political group said to be enjoying the support of politically influential individuals and those in the provincial government.

“We are not involved in armed clashes with any individual or group. The police are taking action against criminals wanted in several cases. Peace is the desired result of all our efforts.”

Meanwhile, the police found the body of an elderly woman from an Eidu Lane residence on Thursday. They said the initial report of a post-mortem examination of the body performed at the CHK cite that it was a natural death. The body was later shifted to the Edhi morgue in Sohrab Goth for want of identification.
 
GREAT!! first PESHAWAR then LAHORE and now KARACHI!!


first shia vs SUNNI then muslims vs AHEMDIS and now family killings in karachi!!


foreign hand is playing a beautiful game here!! make everyone fight each other make pakistan unstable from within!
 
What is going on in Khi now we just had a wave of ethinic killings now there is sectarian killings .

HELO GOP ............. are you there !!?????
I am surprised you did not blame Military for this.
 
What is going on in Khi now we just had a wave of ethinic killings now there is sectarian killings .

HELO GOP ............. are you there !!?????

Most these killers are on a pay roll of some politician Most bastard politician in Pakistan think they are safe and free to rob since people are busy fighting one another so they make it happen.
 
ahhhh. Don't worry guys its nothing new for Karachi people are quite used to it, its going to be only 30-40 more killings and then PPP & MQM will blame each other and later within a weeks time they will go for a couple of meetings and telephonic discussions between Zardari and Altaf, then everything will be back to normal.

And yet again the culprits behind it would turn out to be Taliban or Al-Qaeda. :hitwall:
 
Karachi is a mini Pakistan with all ethnic, linguistic and religious groups living together. People from all over Pakistan come and settle in Karachi to look for jobs and settle here. After conflicts in northern Pakistan there are waves of displaced persons that have settled in Karachi. Many people from Karachi have bought land to build their houses are now occupied/settled by these refugees and they don't know what to do. My friend has a plot where he planned to build his house and was saving money is now occupied and he has no recourse. Karachi seems to be a magnet attracting people. There are other cities like Lahore, Faisalabad, Multan, Sialkot that have industry but people move to Karachi. The federal and provincial governments does not care about Karachi to provide funds to create better civic infrastructure. Karachi provide huge amount of revenue for both federal and provincial governments but gets pittance in return. This creates tension in city as people feel that other group has the advantage of money and jobs. There are also criminal gangs that come from other parts of Pakistan to Karachi to steal cars and commit robberies and then return back to their towns. You should listen to the off-the-record stories Police officers tell who have caught many of these out of city gangs. Many landlords and Sardars from Balochistan and interior Sindh send their men steal their favorite cars from Karachi. It has been reported that most of these killings are done by people that are not from Karachi.
 
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Third power involved in Karachi killings: Malik
Saturday, 12 Jun, 2010 The Interior Minister showed serious concerns over the violence and called a high-level meeting on Monday. — File Photo by AP Metropolitan
Five more killed in Karachi target killings Five more killed in Karachi target killings KARACHI: After a fresh wave of target killings in Karachi, Interior Minister Rehman Malik on Saturday called a high-level meeting at the Governor House.

Governor Sindh Ishrat-ul Ibad and Provincial Interior Minister Dr. Zulfiqar Mirza also attended the meeting.

Addressing the meeting, Malik showed serious concerns over the target killings and said that the third power was involved in the violence and wanted to disrupt the peace in the city.

He said that miscreants involved in the violence would be dealt with strictness.

Regarding the issue, Malik has called a high-level meeting on Monday.

The meeting will be attended by the members of coalition partners, high-level police officals and the Karachi Administrator. — DawnNews



Tags: Rehman malik meeting sindh governor zulfiqar mirza karachi violence
 
Sectarian killings’ claim two more lives in Khi By Imran Ayub
Sunday, 13 Jun, 2010

Two more people, including a young man associated with the medical profession, on Saturday fell prey to what are being described as sectarian killings in the city.

Peace remained a distant dream for Karachiites amid the authorities’ claims that they would move against ‘the miscreants with force and deliver results’.

The fresh targeted killings sparked scattered incidents of violence that included acts of arson in the strife-hit areas such as New Karachi and Ancholi. However, despite police claims about having traced the elements behind the fresh sectarian killings, no arrest has been made on this account. Early in the morning, the 34-year-old man was targeted in Nazimabad when he was coming out of the parking area of a private hospital. Naseer Hussain Jafri was associated with the private hospital where he reached for his routine work.

“It was around 8am when Mr Jafri parked his car and walked to enter the hospital,” said Sub-Inspector Jehanzeb, the SHO of the Nazimabad police station. “Two men riding motorbikes came close to him. One of them pulled out a 9mm pistol and fired multiple shots at him. He received three bullets and died on the spot.”

“It appears a targeted killing on sectarian grounds as we have not yet found facts that may suggest personal enmity as a motive,” said SSP Abdul Hameed Khosa of Liaquatabad Town.

Information gathered by the investigators suggested that one of the attackers wore an off-white shalwar-kameez and the other a shirt and trousers. The latter’s face was covered in a helmet.

Both attackers rode away after the shooting, leaving the young victim in a pool of blood. The victim’s body was later taken to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital.

“The victim was married and lived in Surjani Town. He was a laboratory technician at the private hospital,” said the Nazimabad police station SHO.

Almost an hour later, a young activist of the Sunni Tehreek was gunned down while he was standing with friends at a paan shop in New Karachi. The area police said 25-year-old Rizwan Qadri was among the at least six youngsters hanging out at a known paan shop in Sector 5-E of New Karachi. “All of a sudden two men on a motorcycle emerged and one of them got off the motorbike holding a 9mm pistol,” said Inspector Chaudhary Nazar, the SHO of the Bilal Colony police station. “Most youngsters, including the paan-shop owner, escaped the attack, though Rizwan and Ayaz sustained bullet wounds and were rushed to the Civil Hospital Karachi.”

Before reaching the hospital, Rizwan died. Adnan, having been hit by a single bullet in the abdomen, survived, said the Bilal Colony SHO.

As the news of the ST worker’s death reached his residential area in Madina Colony in Sector 5-E of New Karachi, a law-and-order situation developed when unknown men resorted to uninterrupted firing into the air that forced the shopkeepers to pull down their shutters and transporters to stay off roads in the area.

Fear further gripped the localities of New Karachi, including Sindhi Hotel and Godhra Camp Colony, when two buses were set on fire in Madina Colony.

“We were informed of arson attacks on two buses of routes W-1 and W11 in New Karachi at 11am. The registration number of only W-1 bus could be ascertained as JE-5272 while the other one was damaged so badly that its number had become illegible,” said an official at the central fire station.

Charged atmosphere was also witnessed on Shahrah-i-Pakistan for a fourth consecutive day where dozens of youngsters gathered and blocked the main road in protest against the killing of Naseer Hussain Jafri. Charged youths also pelted passing vehicles with stones.

The police blocked Shahrah-i-Pakistan from the Water Pump end to the Sohrab Goth end as ‘a precautionary measure’ to avert untoward incidents. Life and business activity in the adjoining blocks of Federal B Area remained suspended amid deployment of a heavy contingent of the police backed by the Rangers.
 
There are supporters of Zardari from interior Sindh with connection to PPP are coming to Karachi and committing rapes . They have to be released after their capture when PPP official call order Police to release them. The rapist gang in Karachi has connections with Bilawal House, residence Asif Zardari, they raped over 40 women with impunity. Mr. 10% is Mr Rapist too.

The Battle for Karachi By Amir Zia 28 February 2010 One Comment Photo Illustration: Danish

The Battle for Karachi
By Amir Zia 28 February 2010 One Comment


Photo Illustration: Danish Khan

It was not just a simple boy-meets-girl love story with a tragic ending. It had a twist. The two lovers were already married – just not to each other. The very fact that they belonged to different ethnic backgrounds and lived in a Karachi neighbourhood where ethnic and political tensions ran high, made their love saga even more complicated. Muhammad Amir, who was in his early 30s and a father of two children, belonged to an Urdu-speaking family, while Zainab was a Baloch whose husband worked in Dubai.

Despite repeated warnings from family and some of Zainab’s neighbours, the two continued their taboo relationship. On January 4, Amir was kidnapped. Two days later, his beheaded body was found in Lyari’s Kalakot area and several hours later the head located in Chakiwara, another part of Lyari.

Amir was an activist of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM). This association added another grim twist to the tale. A case of an otherwise routine, but controversial, ‘honour’ killing, exploded into a spree of tit-for-tat targeted murders between militants of rival ethnic groups. Stopping this violence proved beyond the powers of the police as these militants were supporters of the two major parties of the ruling coalition – the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) and the MQM. Police say that at least 24 people were killed in four days of violence. Tensions ran high not just in parts of Karachi’s District South, but also in some areas of its adjacent District West – highlighting again not just the deep political and ethnic divides in Pakistan’s business and industrial capital, but also underlining the muscle power of the armed groups and the sordid relation between crime and politics.



Photo: AFP

“Criminalisation of politics and politicisation of crime is the biggest problem in Karachi,” says a former IG police, requesting anonymity, who served in Sindh in various important positions for several years. “All the major political parties have criminals in their ranks and they are protected and patronised by politicians.”

The Amir-Zainab love saga indeed sparked the violence, but any other issue could have pit rival bands of militants against each other. The innate germs of political and ethnic rivalry and the clash of economic interests, coupled with rampant poverty and crime, provide the basis for such a showdown.

As the police try to trace the killers of Amir and locate Zainab, their story remains nothing more than a minor footnote in the brewing conflict among different political players and crime syndicates operating in Karachi.

“Crime and politics are so interwoven and the relationship among various stakeholders is so complex that breaking away from the present scheme of things appears impossible for any government,” says the former IG. “Many of those in power have a tainted past and a history of supporting and cultivating criminals and their gangs.”

For many security experts, Karachi, with all its ethnic, political and sectarian problems and crime mafias, is like a bubbling volcano all set to explode. The glimpses of the seething lava were seen as recently as December 28, 2009, when angry bands of youngsters went on a rampage, burning and looting more than 6,000 shops following the bombing of the Muharram procession. Top police officials say it was a “natural reaction” by participants of the mourning procession. (For details see CCPO Karachi’s interview in the box).

In the past, too, Karachi has suffered from widespread violence and terrorism scores of times in which politics, ethnicity, sectarianism and crime played a major role.

As the city was limping back to normalcy following the December 28 incident, a fresh bout of violence erupted among rival political activists. According to police data, more than 75 people were killed in the first 10 days of January alone – mostly political workers belonging to different parties. Many private scores were also settled in the killing spree, forcing the federal government to intervene to help calm the situation.

Top PPP and MQM leaders, nudged by President Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani, managed to impose a truce on the streets. But the undercurrents of rivalry and bitterness among the workers and the local leaders of the two groups remain, and are certain to test the unity of the ruling coalition again, in the days to come.



Photo: AFP

Background interviews with leaders of the two parties expose the fragility of peace – especially in District South – the oldest part of Karachi where rival ethnic groups share neighbourhoods and streets.

The MQM sources hold the Peoples Amn Committee of Lyari responsible for triggering the violence. “This Amn Committee comprises gangsters and criminals – members of the notorious Rehman Dakait’s gang,” says an MQM provincial law-maker, who asked not to be named. “And the problem is that the local chapter of the PPP is held hostage to this gang.”

But in the highly polarised world of Karachi politics, one man’s villain is another other man’s hero. And that is the case with Rehman, who was killed by the police in a controversial encounter in August 2009, triggering massive protests by the people of Lyari – the PPP stronghold in Karachi since the early 1970s. For many Lyari residents, Rehman remains a revered figure – a sort of local Robin Hood.

“No one calls him Dakait here,” says Uzair Ali Baloch, who now heads the peace committee. “They will mind if you call him by this name. He is Sardar Abdul Rehman Baloch. He never committed any robbery. The media, the police and the government – all have misguided people about him,” he adds. (Read the story on the Peoples Amn Committee).

The Peoples Amn Committee is not a formal arm of the PPP, but comprises party zealots from Lyari who also remain bitter and angry with many of their elected representatives. This had put the PPP in a dilemma and after the initial reluctance in accepting the group as its own, the Karachi PPP lawmakers have warmed to the committee, which enjoys support on the street as well as muscle power.

“The MQM is responsible for the law and order problem,” says a senior PPP leader, who also requested anonymity. Echoing the sentiment of the Peoples’ Amn Committee, he alleges that the MQM has been trying to change the demography of the area to put a dent in the “PPP fort” of Lyari.

“This tussle is all about MQM’s desire to spread its tentacles to the area where they want to establish a housing society – the amenity land of Gutter Baghicha – and they have already taken over many parks in the adjoining District West where they have settled their own people,” says the PPP leader.

The police say that their hands remain tied because of the political expediency of top government officials.

A crackdown on the criminals of Lyari was halted in the second week of January after PPP’s representative from Karachi in the National Assembly made a hue and cry in parliament. President Zardari himself had to intervene to stop the operation, leaving Interior Minister Rehman Malik red-faced as he was the main target of criticism from his own party members.

According to senior police officials, criminals and militants are not a problem restricted to Lyari alone. “Do you think we can search any of the sector offices of the MQM? We were never given a free hand,” complains one senior police official.

Security officials say that the nexus between politics and crime is an old one in Karachi. Extortionist, kidnappers, drug-peddlers, gun-runners and even petty criminals have managed to find their niche in one political party or the other. All of them are heavily armed and most of them have the connections needed to escape arrest and prosecution.

Other political and religious parties which have heavily-armed bands of militants include the Pakhtun nationalist Awami National Party, the Mohajir Qaumi Movement (Haqiqi), the Jamaat-e-Islami, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, the Sunni Tehreek, and Baloch and Sindhi nationalist groups. All are a source of major headaches for the police.

The influx of both licensed and illegally acquired weapons make the task of the law- enforcement agencies even more difficult in what they describe as one of the most heavily-armed cities of Pakistan.

“When we say weapons it does not just mean pistols or assault rifles…some of these groups have rocket-propelled grenades, rocket launchers and even shoulder-fired missiles,” reports an intelligence official.

However, officially, both the PPP and the MQM deny any links with gangsters or criminals. (See the interviews of MQM leader Farooq Sattar in the magazine and the PPP’s Abdul Qadir Patel online).

Police officials say that the vast squatter settlements and low-income neighbourhoods, especially those which are home to the local and foreign immigrant workers, are the teeming grounds of crime, terrorism and ethnic and sectarian tensions. The neighbourhoods dominated by Urdu-speaking people also have their political, religious and criminal mafias, they add.

But Iqbal Haider, former law minister and a human rights activist, says that criminal gangs also operate with “impunity” in affluent neighbourhoods. “There were dozens of cases of organised gang rapes in Karachi’s Defence and Clifton areas that were brought to our notice. One of the culprits arrested confessed to raping more than 40 women with his aides.”

In one incident, a police mobile van blocked the car of a victim during peak hours on DHA’s 26th street when she was being chased by the kidnappers. “She was kidnapped and raped,” says Haider.

“The hub of the rapists’ activities was a stone throw’s distance from Bilawal House. The perpetuators had criminal and political connections,” Haider maintains. “The building was occupied illegally by politically-connected mafia and some police officials. Police took action against them after the wife of some influential person was raped and we contacted every possible government official concerned with security and law and order. Now, incidents of firing and kidnapping have stopped in that area, which proves that if the authorities want, they can check it.” Haider adds, “No organised crime can exist without administrative support – be it in Lyari or any other part of Pakistan.”

Says a senior police official: one stark example of the involvement of political activists in terrorism and crime can be seen from the fact that more than 100 police officers who took part in the 1990s operations against the MQM were assassinated.

“Such killings stopped after April 2009, after we gave a strict warning to the leaders of that group through powerful government quarters that it won’t be tolerated anymore,” he says. “I told senior government officials that we can no longer take attending the funeral of one officer after another.”

PPP lawmakers also blame militants belonging to their coalition partners for the assassinations of Baloch activists who were campaigning against the utilisation of Gutter Baghicha amenity land for residential purposes. “Even in Lyari, they supported one gang of criminals against the other,” says a PPP leader from Karachi. “Their involvement in crimes can be seen from the fact that MQM workers top the list of the NRO beneficiaries in criminal cases.”

But the MQM strongly denies the charge of its involvement in terrorism or crime and says it has expelled more than 3,500 of its workers to cleanse the party of such elements. (For details see Farooq Sattar’s interview). In 2009, the party says it lost 94 of its workers in targeted killings mostly by criminals in Lyari and militants belonging to the rival Haqiqi faction.

In Lyari and its adjacent areas, MQM workers and supporters were targeted in an organised manner, says an MQM member of the provincial assembly. “We know, and the police knows, that the Peoples Amn Committee, which is in fact the new name of Rehman Dakait’s gang, is behind the killings, violence and crime [in the city]. But the PPP leadership is unable to do anything. In fact, the PPP is now subservient to this gang.”

The MQM claims there is an informal alliance between the peace committee, the ANP and the Haqiqi in an attempt to cut the MQM down to size. “There was even an incident when the beheaded body of one of our workers – Mohammed Mobin Sheikh – was paraded on a donkey cart,” says an MQM MPA.



Photo: AFP

But MQM’s anger is not just directed against Lyari. “The criminals and terrorists have safe havens in other parts of the city as well. Some Haqiqi terrorists operate from the Sherpao area – a Pakhtun-dominated neighbourhood – adjacent to Landhi. If they are ever chased in their hideouts, it could lead to ethnic violence,” says the MQM MPA. “When we ask the police to take action, they refuse, fearing collateral damage.” Citing another example, he says the two slain attackers of the Sindhi nationalist leader Basheer Qureshi belonged to the Haqiqi faction and carried the passes of an intelligence agency.

But apart from the allegations and counter allegations by the main political players, the fact remains that each side has skeletons in their closets. Lyari, where hundreds of people were killed in the infamous war between the rival gangs of Rehman Dakait and Arshad Pappu, is a symbol of that tussle, but the overlapping of crime and politics is a rampant phenomenon in the entire city.

From cases of kidnapping for ransom – in which not just Taliban militants are involved but also some key leaders of the Sindhi nationalist parties – to the subtly-run extortion racket, criminals have links with activists of one party or the other.

Security officials say it is easy for both criminals and terrorists to remain anonymous in a megalopolis like Karachi. The indifference of city life provides a perfect shelter of anonymity to everyone. The corruption and connivance of the police and the politics of patronage helps the criminal-political mafias to sustain, grow and expand.

“Karachi is like a gold-laying goose,” says a retired police officer. “Every political party likes to get its share of the booty according to its power and strength.”

The problem is magnified with key political players vying to control the city, which provides billions of rupees in donations and through the patronage of legal and illegal businesses. The simple rule of gaining power and influence in the city is that there are no rules of the game. Top PPP and MQM leaders may want to keep their alliance intact to remain in power as well as to provide a semblance of peace and rule of law in the city, but breaking the nexus of crime and politics does not seem to be on their agenda. The citizens of Karachi seem destined to live dangerously from one cycle of killings and violence to another. Powerful mafias of criminals, interests groups and bands of terrorists all have the potential and power to ignite city-wide violence at will. And in these testing times, the law-enforcement agencies continue to be found wanting.
 
Seven more killed as ‘sectarian killings’ continue in Karachi By Imran Ayub
Tuesday, 15 Jun, 2010 Fifteen people have lost their lives in the wave of sectarian killings in June, reports said. — File photo Pakistan
Senate concerned over Karachi law and order Senate concerned over Karachi law and order KARACHI: At least seven people were killed in Karachi in incidents of target killings during the past 24 hours, taking the toll of sectarian killings in the first two weeks of June to 15, DawnNews reported.

An elderly man and an activist of a religious outfit were shot dead in different parts of the city on Monday.

On Monday morning, an elderly man was forced to stop his car under the Nazimabad flyover before being shot dead by armed motorcyclists, police and witnesses said.

Syed Ayub Naqvi, 68, who was known among his peers for his literary contributions, was targeted near the main Petrol Pump bus stop while he was driving to an Imambargah in Nazimabad No 3.

“Mr Naqvi was heading to Imambargah Noor-i-Iman when his car was intercepted by two armed motorcyclists under the Nazimabad flyover,” said Sub-Inspector Jehanzeb, the SHO of the Nazimabad police station.

“The riders forced him to apply brakes. As soon as he stopped, one of the riders got off the motorbike carrying a 9mm pistol and fired multiple shots at the elderly man, who died on the spot.”

The attackers escaped from the crime-scene, leaving him in a pool of blood, the policeman said.

The body was later shifted to the Abbasi Shaheed Hospital for medico-legal formalities. Doctors said the victim had suffered two bullet wounds in the head.

Mr Naqvi was a resident of Gulshan-i-Iqbal and father of two. Apart from being the author of a few books, he had several translations to his credit. He also set up a bookstall in the Imambargah every Friday, his aides said.

In the evening, a large number of people attended the victim’s funeral prayers offered at Imambargah Rizvia in Nazimabad. They chanted slogans against terrorism and sectarianism and also criticised the government for its failure to put an end to the wave of sectarian killings in the city.

Condemning the latest incident, religious leaders and scholars expressed their serious concern over the fresh wave of killings targeting members of a particular sect in the city. They said the ongoing sectarian killings had exposed the government claims that a strategy was ready to take action against the banned outfits.

“Karachi has become a centre of targeted killings,” said Allama Abbas Kumaili of the Jafria Alliance Pakistan. “An operation has become crucial to root out terrorism and its links in the city. Otherwise, it will be a disastrous situation beyond everyone’s control.”

Later in the evening, an activist of the Ahl-i-Sunnat Wal Jamaat was gunned down near his apartment on University Road, police and party sources said.

Ibrahim Mana, 32, was targeted by two armed motorcyclists close to the Met Office, an official of the Mobina Town police station said. He said the activist received five bullets in his upper torso.

“He was walking home when targeted by the armed men on a motorbike,” said the official. “He was rushed to a private hospital in Gulistan-i-Jauhar, where he died during the treatment. The body was later shifted to the Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre for medico-legal formalities.”

A spokesman for the Ahl-i-Sunnat Wal Jamaat termed the fresh killing an attempt to foment sectarian unrest. He cited “anti-state forces behind the frequent murders of the aides.”

“We have lost at least three colleagues within a week,” said Ahsanullah Farooqi of the Ahl-i-Sunnat Wal Jamaat, formerly called the Sipah-i-Sahaba Pakistan. “Our appeals and request to the authorities concerned for the security of the party workers have been ignored and it seems that the authorities are not interested in maintaining peace in the city.”

Meanwhile, markets remained closed in Nazimabad and Ancholi as fear gripped various localities amid interrupted gunfire. A bus was also set ablaze near the Petrol Pump bus stop in Nazimabad.

An hour after sunset, charged youths hurled stones at the vehicles passing through the Golimar area. The situation became even more precarious when police fired into the air and used teargas shells to disperse the mob.

The situation caused severe traffic jams in different areas, including Liaquatabad, Nazimabad, Habib Bank Chowrangi, and on roads linking Nazimabad with other parts of the metropolis.

Fifteen people have lost their lives in the wave of sectarian killings in June. The frequent protest demonstrations against the killings have only won pledges from the authorities who claim to be very ‘close to the killers.’

“We are looking into each case separately,” said Sindh Inspector-General of Police Sultan Salahuddin Babar Khattak while speaking to Dawn on Monday.

“In several cases, we have found links that suggest these were indeed sectarian killings. Obviously, we have reason to believe that a few of them were executed by the banned outfits.”

When asked what surety the police authorities could give to prevent the possible spread of sectarian unrest, he confidently said that a strategy had already been evolved to counter such attempts. “In some cases, we have identified the people behind the killings. Efforts are on for their arrests. We will not let it grow from this point,” the IG said.
 

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