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Peshawar firing

runa moosani

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Peshawar firing: Toll rises to eight as two more succumbs to injuries










PESHAWAR: The number of toll in the Peshawar firing incident has increased to eight after two more injured succumbed to their injuries on Saturday, Geo News reported.



According to the initial reports, six people were killed and others were injured after gunmen opened fire on a car in Matni area of Peshawar on Friday night.



Police said the unknown shooters targeted the car near Gulzar Chowk in Matni area around midnight.



The police rushed to the crime scene before the attacker could flee and engaged them in a gunfight.



Search operation to apprehend the culprits was launched after the incident while the identities of the victims could not be ascertained till the last reports.



Also, police have prepared the initial report of the incident according to which the killers had targeted the vehicle of Nasarullah, a resident of Quetta.



When the perpetrators opened fire on Nasarullah’s car, the other local residents came out from their houses and became victims of the bullets sprayed by the attackers.



There were total 35 to 40 attackers who ambushed Nasarullah.



The report further revealed that one of the attackers got injured but the other militants took him away with them.


Source.Peshawar firing: Toll rises to eight as two more succumbs to injuries - thenews.com.pk
 
Few possibilities I suppose:

-Tribal revenge
-Terrorists attempt for specific purpose
-Personal rivalry.
 
Bahut hi afsos nak waqiyq hy yeh ALLAH hum sub ki hifazat famayen (Ameen)

The Bulava (Russian: Булава, lit. "mace"; designation RSM-56, NATO reporting name SS-NX-32, GRAU index 3M30) is a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) developed for the Russian Navy and deployed in 2013 on the new Borei class of ballistic missile nuclear submarines. It is intended as the future cornerstone of Russia's nuclear triad, and is the most expensive weapons project in the country.[6] The weapon takes its name from bulava, a Russian word for mace, and is designed as a counterpart to the USA's Trident II.

Designed by Moscow Institute of Thermal Technology, development of the missile was launched in the late 1990s as a replacement for the R-39 solid-fuel SLBM.[4] It is expected that the first three Borei-class submarines will carry 16 missiles, while the following five vessels will carry 20 missiles. Development and deployment of the Bulava missile within the Russian Navy is not affected by the enforcement of the new START treaty.[7]

The missile's flight test programme was problematic. Until 2009, there were 6 failures in 13 flight tests and one failure during ground test, blamed mostly on insufficient quality of component production. After a failure in December 2009, further tests were put on hold and a probe was conducted to find out the reasons for the failures. Testing was resumed on 7 October 2010 with a launch from the Typhoon-class submarine Dmitri Donskoi in the White Sea; the warheads successfully hit their targets at the Kura Test Range in the Russian Far East.[8] Seven launches have been conducted since the probe, all successful. On 28 June 2011, the missile was launched for the first time from its standard carrier, Borei-class submarine Yury Dolgorukiy, and on 27 August 2011 the first full-range (over 9,000 km (5,600 mi)) flight test was conducted. After this successful launch, the start of serial production of Bulava missiles in the same configuration was announced on 28 June 2011. A successful salvo launch on 23 December 2011 concluded the flight test programme. The missile was officially approved for service on 27 December 2011,[9] and finally commissioned aboard the Yuri Dolgorukiy on 10 January 2013

Yeah u R absloutly right my bro
 
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