More Mayhem in Lahore; Terrorists Attack Hospital and Kill 12; Then Escape

Posted on May 31, 2010
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Law & Justice, Religion, Society
52 Comments
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Adil Najam

The details of exactly what happened here are still sketchy. Except that this terrorist attack on the Emergency Ward of Lahore’s Jinnah Hospital was clearly related to the brutal attack of Ahmadis in Lahore earlier this week.

The basic facts of what we do know about this brutal terrorist attack are horrendous enough: four terrorists came in disguised as policemen and took control of the Emergency section of Jinnah Hospital where a number of people who had been injured in the earlier attack on Ahmadis in Lahore were admitted, as was one of the suspects of that attack (Muaz); the ensuing gun battle with the police was not pretty and left twelve people dead, including four policemen; eventually the terrorists were able to flee in safety.

Sketchy as itself is, the best account one can find right now of what happened is in The Express Tribune:

In an audacious attack, four terrorists entered the emergency ward at Jinnah hospital near midnight and began firing indiscriminately, killing 12 people, including four policemen. The terrorists then took patients, attendants and hospital staff hostage. The terrorists later fled.

Eyewitnesses described the terrorist as fair-complexioned and between the ages of 20 and 22. They are said to have entered the hospital premises camouflaged as police and eyewitnesses said they were riding a vehicle with an official number plate. Some police officials say the objective of the attack seems to have been either killing or securing the release of one of the terrorists responsible for Friday’s attack on the Ahmadi ibadatgah in Model Town, Muaz, who had been captured the same day and was under treatment at Jinnah hospital.

Responding to the hospital’s SOS, the police moved in soon after to cordon off the area and secure the hospital. For at least 30 minutes, the two sides traded fire. One of the terrorists is also said to have been shot in the leg.

One of the terrorists is said to have made his way to the rooftop of the hospital and from this vantage point, continued providing covering fire and picking out the policemen assembled in the hospital premises. Shortly after, the police brought in Armoured Personnel Carriers and Elite Forces reinforcements and managed to cordon off the area.

In order to prevent the terrorists from identifying the location of Muaz in the ICU,  police say, they disconnected power supply to the hospital. Panicked by the firing and the dark, patients, their attendants and the hospital staff made for the exits, running for their lives.

In the ensuing melee, police sources say, the four terrorists made good their escape from the rear entrance of the hospital. As the police gave chase, there was a brief encounter between the two sides in the adjoining area of Hanjarwal, before the terrorists fled from there as well.

Initially, eyewitnesses said the terrorists used a police vehicle for their getaway but later, the police contradicted this claim. It is now being thought that since the car the attackers came in had a government number plate, that’s why the eyewitnesses were deceived. From the rounds left behind, the police are surmising that the four were armed with AK 47s as well as other guns.

The IG Punjab and other senior police officials reached the area to supervise the operation and soon after, managed to secure the building. Meanwhile, police sources said, Muaz was shifted to an undisclosed location.

However, independent analysts are dismissing the police’s theory of the terrorists wanting to secure Muaz’s release. Muaz, it is said, is a significant member of the Punjabi Tehreek-e-Taliban, originally from Muzzaffargarh, and the authorities expect him to render a great deal of useful information about terrorist networks in southern Punjab. However, since he was on life support in the ICU, analysts say, it is unlikely that his comrades could have transported him and must have meant to kill him.

Till the filing of this report, there were conflicting reports about the death toll. While the Jinnah hospital administration said 12 had been killed, DCO Lahore Sajjad Bhutta said between six and eight persons had been killed.

Jinnah hospital medical superintendent Dr Javed Akram requisitioned medical staff from other hospitals of the city to treat the injured.

Several of those injured in Friday’s attacks which killed more than 80 Ahmadis were under treatment in Jinnah Hospital.

Meanwhile, the IG Punjab says that Lahore has been put on high alert and all the entry and exit points to the city have been sealed.

Right now there are more questions than there are answers. And even more mayhem, panic and fear. Exactly what the terrorists want. More than that, just as one thought that the tide of public opinion was turning starkly against the Taliban and their violent tactics, it seems the terrorists may have hit a winning formula: Once they start targeting Ahmadis, too many ‘good’ Pakistanis seem willing to either remain just silent, or turn the conversations into a theological debate about who is and is not a ‘real’ Muslim, instead of focusing on the brutality and inhumanity of these terrorists killing Pakistanis. The rest of the world has, of course, never shown interest in Pakistanis being targeted by these terrorists as long as it kept them off their backs; now, it seems that ‘good’ Pakistanis will also look the the other way as long as it is Ahmadis who are targeted!

You know what this makes these ‘good’ Pakistanis who choose to remain either silent or look the other way or try to change the topic by camouflaging it in vague religosity? Bad Pakistanis.

52 responses to “More Mayhem in Lahore; Terrorists Attack Hospital and Kill 12; Then Escape”

  1. AHsn says:

    In the following, is a poem which is not a poem written by a poet who is not a poet.

    I don’t write poems but, in any case, poems are not poems
    Ghassan Hage

    Long ago, I was made to understand that Palestine was not Palestine ;
    I was also informed that Palestinians were not Palestinians;
    They also explained to me that ethnic cleansing was not ethnic cleansing.
    And when naive old me saw freedom fighters
    they patiently showed me that they were not freedom fighters,
    and that resistance was not resistance.
    And when, stupidly, I noticed arrogance, oppression and humiliation
    they benevolently enlightened me so I can see that arrogance was not arrogance,
    oppression was not oppression, and humiliation was not humiliation.
    I saw misery, racism, inhumanity and a concentration camp.
    But they told me that they were experts
    in misery, racism, inhumanity and concentrations camps
    and I have to take their word for it:
    this was not misery, racism, inhumanity and a concentrations camp.
    Over the years they’ve taught me so many things:
    invasion was not invasion, occupation was not occupation,
    colonialism was not colonialism and apartheid was not apartheid…
    They opened my simple mind to even more complex truths
    that my poor brain could not on its own compute like:
    ‘having nuclear weapons’ was not ‘having nuclear weapons’,
    ‘not having weapons of mass destruction’ was ‘having weapons of mass destruction’.
    And, democracy (in the Gaza strip) was not democracy.
    Having second class citizens (in Israel ) was democracy.
    So you’ll excuse me if I am not surprised to learn today
    that there were more things that I thought were evident that are not:
    peace activists are not peace activists, piracy is not piracy,
    the massacre of unarmed people is not the massacre of unarmed people.
    I have such a limited brain and my ignorance is unlimited.
    And they’re so f…ing intelligent. Really.

    Added:-

    Thus, Pakistan is not Pak-istan
    And muslim is not The Muslim.
    Islamic republic is Democracy
    And intolerance of minorities is Secularism.
    —————-and so on.

  2. readinglord says:

    @Tarique

    “We live in the Middle East, in a place where there is no mercy for the weak and there aren’t second chances for those who don’t defend themselves,”; these are the words the Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak was quoted as saying, when he visited the commandos involved in the raid on the Aid Flotilla.

    Do not these words apply more fittingly to the people who live in the Pakiland as well?

  3. Tarique says:

    The recent Lahore attack again exposed the sheer incapacity of our law enforcement agencies to protect even the most vulnerable people.

  4. talawat says:

    @AHsan

    Have you not read Bulleh Shah who had said over three centuries ago:

    “Masjid dha dey, Mandir dha dey, dha dey jo kujh dheinda
    Ik bandey da dil nah dhaawein, Rab dilaan wich rehnda”

    (Pull down a mosque, pull down a mandar, pull down every thing you can, but don’t undermine the heart of the man as God lives in that heart )

  5. Sunni Muslim says:

    Thank you for your brave words Prof. Najam. I appreciate your courage and your always speaking out. I wish more of us did this.

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