Perilous
Times
65 killed in Karachi violence
* From correspondents in Karachi
* From: AFP
* August 20, 2011 7:18PM
ETHNIC and criminal violence blamed on gangs has killed 65 people
in Pakistan's financial capital of Karachi, with police the latest
victims shot dead in a brazen ambush, officials said today.
The government has been left struggling for solutions to the worst
wave of unrest to sweep the city in 16 years as extra deployments
of police and paramilitary officers appear unable to stem the
troubles.
Spiralling unrest is a major source of concern in Pakistan's
biggest city, which is used by NATO to ship the bulk of its
supplies to troops fighting in Afghanistan and which accounts for
around a fifth of the country's GDP.
The violence has been linked to ethnic tensions between the
Mohajirs, the Urdu-speaking majority represented by the Muttahida
Qaumi Movement (MQM), and Pashtun migrants affiliated to the Awami
National Party (ANP).
Gunmen ambushed police today, sparking gunbattles in which four
officers were killed and more than 30 others wounded, officials
said, bringing the death toll to 65 since Thursday.
The police commandos, dressed in plain clothes, were targeted in
the eastern neighbourhood of Korangi, which had previously been
immune from the troubles.
"These policemen were in a van going on a raid on a tip-off when
they were intercepted by armed men who started firing, injuring
many policemen," senior police official Shaukat Hussain said. "The
police returned fire and at least one attacker has been killed."
Television footage showed injured policemen being carried by their
comrades and local residents into ambulances and private vehicles
heading to hospital.
"Our hospital has received 32 injured policemen, four of whom are
critically injured. They all have gunshot wounds," said Seemin
Jamali, spokeswoman for the Jinnah Post Graduate Medical Centre.
Karachi city police chief Saud Mirza said that four police were
killed.
Speaking after the funerals of the dead policeman today,
provincial police chief Wajid Durrani said two of the attackers
who fired at the police van were arrested.
"We have caught two attackers and we are interrogating them about
others," Mr Durrani said, adding that 18 people who were kidnapped
on Friday had been retrieved by police.
Provincial home minister Manzoor Wasan said he could not give
details about which parties or ethnic groups were involved in the
violence but said that "some 100 suspects had been arrested so
far".
Witnesses in Korangi said there were pockets of intense gunfire
between armed groups with ordinary people too frightened to leave
home. Dominated by Urdu speakers, the area also has Pashtun,
Baluch and Sindhi populations.
Karachi, currently a city of 18 million inhabitants and the
country's economic powerhouse, has seen its population explode
since independence in 1947.
Its neighbourhoods have been swollen by a huge influx of migrants
from across the country, but particularly the deprived Pashtun
northwest, looking for jobs and more recently to escape Taliban
and al-Qaeda-linked violence.
Speaking off the record because they were not authorised to
release the information to the media, two security officials
confirmed that 65 people had now died in violence in Karachi since
Thursday.
The city's worst-affected areas are impoverished and heavily
populated neighbourhoods where most of the criminal gangs are
believed to be hiding.