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Eight killed, six
Sri Lankan cricketers hurt in Lahore terror attack
By Muhammaad Sajjad, Lahore/Colombo, March 3, 2009 (IANS)
Masked
terrorists armed with automatic weapons Tuesday opened relentless
fire at the convoy of the Sri Lankan cricket team as it headed for
Lahore's Gaddafi stadium, killing eight people and injuring six
players. A military helicopter later whisked the players to safety
as Sri Lanka cancelled its Pakistan tour. Six of those killed were
police bodyguards meant to provide security to the team, while two
bystanders also lost their lives as the terrorists spread mayhem
in the area for almost 25 minutes.
Four persons have been
arrested from Lahore's Model Town area for their suspected involvement
in the attack, with Geo TV saying: "Arms have been recovered
from two of them". A
group of 12 gunmen carrying rocket launchers and grenades targeted
the team bus about 500 yards from Gaddafi stadium, where Sri Lanka
was to play Pakistan on the third day of their second cricket test.
The attack, being compared
to the 26/11 Mumbai carnage, was the biggest attack on foreigners
ever since the attack on Marriott Hotel last September in which
the Czech ambassador and three American marines were among the 53
people killed. The
attack affected the bourses with the Karachi Stock Exchange KSE
100 index dropping 1.5 percent to close at 5,596.49. The stock exchange
dipped by over 3 percent at the beginning of trading when news of
the attack started coming in. It later recovered slightly after
reports that all the Sri Lankan players were safe.
In an inexplicable
move, the Punjab provincial government initially said that the team
bus was caught in a crossfire between two groups of land grabbers.
According to
provincial governor Salman Taseer, the assault was the handiwork
of the same terror group that had hit Mumbai. "It
was a planned terrorist act on the pattern of the attack on Mumbai.
I believe the same terrorists are involved in both the incidents,"
Taseer told reporters.
Another official, Lahore
Commissioner Khushro Pervaiz, was quoted as saying that Indian involvement
in the attack could not be ruled out.
The team bus, which
came under attack at about 8.30 a.m. at the Liberty Market crossing
close to the stadium, was riddled with bullets. Sri
Lankan cricket captain Mahela Jayawardene said that the players
dived to the floor of the bus to take cover when the bus suddenly
came under heavy fire. "The
bus came under attack as we were driving to the stadium, the gunmen
targeted the wheels of the bus first and then the bus," Cricinfo
quoted Jayawardene as saying.
"We all dived
to the floor to take cover. Five players have been injured and also
Paul Farbrace (a member of the support staff), but most of the injuries
appear to be minor at this stage and caused by debris," he
added.
Pakistan Cricket Board
sources said the van carrying the match umpires also came under
attack, leaving the umpires' liaison officer Abdul Sami injured.
One of the umpires, Ahsan Raza, was reported to be critically injured.
Qasim, a resident
of Lahore, told Dawn.com that he was in his office, located near
the site of the attack, when he heard the first blast at 8:30 a.m.
A grenade had been
thrown at the bus but it landed about 20 feet away. A second grenade
was hurled under the bus but the driver managed to manoeuvre the
vehicle to ensure the team wasn't hurt, he added. According
to Qasim, three or four men started firing at the bus shortly after
the grenade attack. "They
were just firing everywhere," he said.
According to Lahore
police chief Habibur Rehman, the attackers "had come by rickshaws".
All the attackers
made good their escape, leaving behind a huge quantity of weapons
and ammunition. A car suspected to have been used by the attackers
was seized.
Pakistani President
Asif Ali Zardari and Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani strongly condemned
the attack and asked the authorities concerned to immediately investigate
the incident so that the perpetrators are identified and their "motives
exposed".
The terror attack sparked
outrage in Sri Lanka, with President Mahinda Rajapaksa instructing
that the players be brought home immediately. Rajapaksa,
who cut short his three-day visit to Nepal, "unequivocally
condemned the cowardly terrorist attack".
The Sri Lankan High
Commission said in a statement: "Members of the Sri Lankan
Cricket Team have received minor injuries including Kumar Sangakkara,
Ajantha Mendis, Suranga Lakmal and Thilina Thushara and Assistant
Coach Paul Farbrace. Thilan Samaraweera and Tharanga Paranavitana
have been admitted to the Lahore Hospital."
Later, Samaraweera
and Paranavitana were brought back to the stadium and flown to the
airport on a Pakistan Air Force helicopter for their return journey
to Colombo. Most
of the other players had already been flown to Allama Iqbal International
Airport in Lahore to be flown back home. The
Sri Lankan team was in Pakistan to play in place of India that had
pulled out of the series after the Nov 26-29 Mumbai carnage that
was blamed on Pakistani terrorists.
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