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Punjab
Statement:2009
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Date
Incidents
January - 5 
Jihad will be mandatory for the Pakistani nation in case India attacks the country, a joint communiqué issued in an All Parties’ Conference said on January 5, according to Daily Times. The conference, held at Jamia Naeemia in Lahore, was attended by a number of noted religious scholars and heads of
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Jihad will be mandatory for the Pakistani nation in case India attacks the country, a joint communiqué issued in an All Parties’ Conference said on January 5, according to Daily Times. The conference, held at Jamia Naeemia in Lahore, was attended by a number of noted religious scholars and heads of various religious and political parties, including the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz, the Tehreek-e-Insaaf, the Sunni Tehrik, the Mustafai Tehrik, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Pakistan, the Minhajul Quran, the Nizam-e-Mustafa Party and the Jamaat Ahle Sunnat. The participants demanded the Government immediately convene an emergency session of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC). The participants also demanded the OIC issue a declaration condemning India and expressing solidarity with the people of Palestine. Chairing the meeting, Federal Minister for Zakat and Ushr Pir Nurul Haq Qadri said the two major political parties of the country should not create difficulties for each other, as that would worsen Pakistan’s current crises.
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January - 10 
The house arrest of Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (a front for the Lashkar-e-Toiba [LeT]) founder Hafiz Mohammed Saeed has been extended for another 60 days, Punjab Additional Home Secretary Usman Anwar said on January 10, Daily Times reported on January 11. “His house has already been declared a sub-jail where
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The house arrest of Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (a front for the Lashkar-e-Toiba [LeT]) founder Hafiz Mohammed Saeed has been extended for another 60 days, Punjab Additional Home Secretary Usman Anwar said on January 10, Daily Times reported on January 11. “His house has already been declared a sub-jail where he will spend the rest of the detention period,” Anwar said, adding that the Punjab Government extended the detention on orders from the federal Government.
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January - 29 
Police in Rawalpindi claimed to have arrested nine suspected terrorists and seized 100kg of explosives, detonators and other material during a raid on January 29, Dawn reported. According to City Police Officer (CPO) Rao Iqbal, the suspects belonged to a group formed by a Kenyan national who himself
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Police in Rawalpindi claimed to have arrested nine suspected terrorists and seized 100kg of explosives, detonators and other material during a raid on January 29, Dawn reported. According to City Police Officer (CPO) Rao Iqbal, the suspects belonged to a group formed by a Kenyan national who himself was killed during a terrorist attack. Addressing a press conference, he said the arrests were made when police and elite force personnel raided a house in the city’s Dhoke Lakhan area. They also seized four motorbikes, one car, detonators with wires, nut and bolts weighing 20 kg, one timer, four hand-grenades and eight pistols. One of the detained suspects is Dr Abdul Razzaq of the Cantonment Hospital who has been missing for some time and his case is in the Lahore High Court in Islamabad. The CPO said the terrorist gang had indirect links with the militant group of Baitullah Mehsud in Wana. He said they had confessed to having carried out a number of terrorist attacks, including the RA Bazaar bombing in which seven army personnel were killed, assassination of Lt-Gen Mushtaq Ahmed Baig, Melody suicide attack on police force, blast outside the Danish embassy and heinous attack on Italian restaurant. The terrorists, Rao Iqbal said, were planning a suicide attack during the March 23 Pakistan Day parade. The terrorists were identified as Mohammad Ilyas alias Qari Jamil, Mohammad Rizwan alias Shamasul Haq, Faisal Ahmed Khan, Zeeshan Jaleel, Mohammad Sarfraz, Mohammad Naeem Shakir, Mohammad Nadeem and Osama Bin Waheed, besides Dr Abul Razzaq.
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March - 3 
Police claimed at least 12 terrorists, who appeared to be highly trained and used rocket launchers, hand-grenades and sophisticated automatic guns in the operation lasting about 30 minutes, were involved in the attack. The attackers subsequently escaped from the incident site after commandeering a c
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Police claimed at least 12 terrorists, who appeared to be highly trained and used rocket launchers, hand-grenades and sophisticated automatic guns in the operation lasting about 30 minutes, were involved in the attack. The attackers subsequently escaped from the incident site after commandeering a car and rickshaw. Police found a large quantity of hand-grenades, rocket launchers, suicide jackets, plastic explosives, time devices, Kalashnikov rifles, pistols and walkie-talkies left at different places in a radius of a few furlongs by the attackers. Police also seized three hand-grenades, a time device and a Kalashnikov from the backyard of the house of a retired army officer and several other weapons from near the Alfatah Departmental Store in Makka Colony and other adjacent places. They also seized a car parked near the Liberty Park with a huge-quantity of grenades and Kalashnikovs.
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March - 3 
Sri Lanka canceled the tour immediately after the attack and sent a special plane to escort its team back home later in the day. Governor of Punjab Salmaan Taseer termed the incident a planned attack and said it seemed to have followed the Mumbai attacks pattern, adding the attackers were not ordina
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Sri Lanka canceled the tour immediately after the attack and sent a special plane to escort its team back home later in the day. Governor of Punjab Salmaan Taseer termed the incident a planned attack and said it seemed to have followed the Mumbai attacks pattern, adding the attackers were not ordinary people, but highly trained. Capital City Police Officer Haji Habibur Rehman said the identity of the suspects was yet to be ascertained and an investigation had been launched to track them. Police also claimed they had detained a rickshaw driver from the Cantonment area whose three-wheeler had been used by two gunmen to escape from the scene. A senior police officer said they had detained five people for questioning, according to Daily Times.
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March - 17 
The death toll in the March 16 suicide bombing in Rawalpindi bomb blast increased to 15 on March 17, Dawn reported. 25 people were also injured when a suicide bomber blew himself up near a busy bus stand at Pirwadhai. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack so far. The Superintendent of Pol
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The death toll in the March 16 suicide bombing in Rawalpindi bomb blast increased to 15 on March 17, Dawn reported. 25 people were also injured when a suicide bomber blew himself up near a busy bus stand at Pirwadhai. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack so far. The Superintendent of Police (Investigation) said, "Powerful explosives were used in the attack and the bodies of most of the victims were charred."
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April - 5 
Advisor to the Prime Minister on Interior, Rehman Malik, has said that those involved in the suicide bombings are Pakistanis and that they are playing with the lives of innocent people for the sake of a few pennies, according to The News. Talking to the media after the suicide attack at Chakwal on A
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Advisor to the Prime Minister on Interior, Rehman Malik, has said that those involved in the suicide bombings are Pakistanis and that they are playing with the lives of innocent people for the sake of a few pennies, according to The News. Talking to the media after the suicide attack at Chakwal on April 5, he said that “the price of a suicide bomber is from Rs 0.5 million to Rs 1.5 million while the family of the bomber gets Rs 0.5 million”. He further said that Islamabad and Lahore were the worst affected cities due to the recent series of terrorist incidents.
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April - 24 
The Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, on April 24 rejected the notion that the peace deal through Sufi Mohammed amounted to giving any “concession” to the armed Islamists, and declared that not only the Army had the resolve to take on the militants but, according to him, “victory ag
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The Chief of Army Staff, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, on April 24 rejected the notion that the peace deal through Sufi Mohammed amounted to giving any “concession” to the armed Islamists, and declared that not only the Army had the resolve to take on the militants but, according to him, “victory against terror and militancy will be achieved at all costs”. Speaking at a meeting of top military commanders at the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi, the army chief acknowledged that doubts were being voiced about the intent and capability of the army to defeat the militants, Dawn reported. But, he added, the army “never has and never will hesitate to sacrifice, whatever it may take, to ensure safety and well-being of the people and country’s territorial integrity”. He described the recent peace deal with Maulana Fazlullah’s Swat-based militants as an “operational pause” that was meant to give the “reconciliatory forces” a chance, but declared that it “must not be taken for a concession to militants”.
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April - 28 
The Inter-Services Public Relations Director General, Major General Athar Abbas, told a news conference in Rawalpindi on April 28 that the military operation in Lower Dir, which started on April 26, had been completed. “The operation in Dir has successfully been completed, during which 70 to 75 mili
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The Inter-Services Public Relations Director General, Major General Athar Abbas, told a news conference in Rawalpindi on April 28 that the military operation in Lower Dir, which started on April 26, had been completed. “The operation in Dir has successfully been completed, during which 70 to 75 militants were killed,” he said. Ten personnel of the Security Forces were also killed during the operation. He said over 300 militants had started entering Lower Dir on April 2 and 3. Despite warning from the Government officials, they did not stop their unlawful activities, he added. “They were involved in kidnapping for ransom, killing police and other security officials and other unlawful acts,” he said. He also said no foreign militant was found during the Dir operation.
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May - 7 
Army chief General Kayani has said the army would employ all resources to ensure a decisive ascendancy over militants, Dawn reported. Chairing the corps commanders’ conference at General Headquarters in Rawalpindi on May 7, he said the army was fully aware of the gravity of the internal threat. Gen
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Army chief General Kayani has said the army would employ all resources to ensure a decisive ascendancy over militants, Dawn reported. Chairing the corps commanders’ conference at General Headquarters in Rawalpindi on May 7, he said the army was fully aware of the gravity of the internal threat. Gen Kayani told the conference the army had developed full-scale facilities to focus on low-intensity conflict-related operations. According to a press release of the Inter-Services Public Relations, the Army chief said: “The present security situation requires that all elements of national power should work in close harmony to fight the menace of terrorism and extremism.”
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May - 27 
Officials later said at least three suspects had been detained. Civil Defence District Officer Mazhar Abbas told Daily Times a suicide jacket and two Russian-made hand grenades had been found from the blast site. Sukhera said 27 people, including 11 Policemen, died in the attack. The AP news agency
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Officials later said at least three suspects had been detained. Civil Defence District Officer Mazhar Abbas told Daily Times a suicide jacket and two Russian-made hand grenades had been found from the blast site. Sukhera said 27 people, including 11 Policemen, died in the attack. The AP news agency reported that “several intelligence agents” were among the dead. Sukhera said nobody had claimed responsibility for the attack. A nearby filling station was totally destroyed and several car showrooms damaged. The ceilings of several operating rooms in a nearby hospital caved in, and windows of buildings in a two-kilometre radius were shattered. Most of the outer wall of the ISI office was destroyed and the building partially damaged, while the CCPO’s office was also damaged.
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June - 17 
The Lahore Police on June 17 claimed the arrest of a terrorist involved in the attack on a visiting Sri Lankan cricket team on March 3, with officials claiming the attackers had plans to take the cricketers hostage to demand the release of jailed leaders of their group, Daily Times reported. The Cap
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The Lahore Police on June 17 claimed the arrest of a terrorist involved in the attack on a visiting Sri Lankan cricket team on March 3, with officials claiming the attackers had plans to take the cricketers hostage to demand the release of jailed leaders of their group, Daily Times reported. The Capital City Police Officer (CCPO) Pervaiz Rathore told a press conference that the arrested man, identified as Zubair alias Naik Muhammad, who killed an unarmed traffic warden in the attack was a member of the Punjab Taliban, an offshoot of the banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) group. Seven people, including six Policemen, were killed when terrorists ambushed the Sri Lankan team while it was being driven to Gaddafi Stadium for a match. The CCPO said the terrorists had originally planned to take the Sri Lankan cricket team hostage until the release of some important leaders. The plan, however, changed when the terrorists were confronted by Policemen in the Liberty area, he added. While the other six terrorists had been identified – Muhammad Aqeel alias Dr Usman of Rawalpindi, Samiullah alias Ijaz, Adnan alias Sajjad, Ajmal alias Ehsan and Umer – the CCPO said they fled to Waziristan a few days after the attack. He said the terrorists arrived in Lahore a week ahead of the attacks and rented houses in various areas. Zubair – who appeared at the televised press conference with his head covered – said the mastermind of the attack took the others to a rented house located on a street in front of Mansoora a day before the assault, and gave them weapons.
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June - 24 
On June 24, the Punjab Inspector General of Police, Tariq Saleem Dogar, told a top-level meeting in Lahore that 18 terrorists and suicide bombers had been arrested from Punjab and suicide jackets recovered over the past month and a half. The meeting was told that Shahbaz Ali Khalid alias Abdullah, S
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On June 24, the Punjab Inspector General of Police, Tariq Saleem Dogar, told a top-level meeting in Lahore that 18 terrorists and suicide bombers had been arrested from Punjab and suicide jackets recovered over the past month and a half. The meeting was told that Shahbaz Ali Khalid alias Abdullah, Shujat Ali alias Tikka, Muhammad Akhtar Naeem alias Shah Jee, Said Ahmad alias Mujahid and Qari Muhammad Arshad were planning to commit terrorist acts, while Qari Asim, Muhammad Zubair, Rizwan Mehmood, Rizwan Abdul Qadir, Qari Sanaullah, Hijratullah alias Shakirullah alias Pattanga alias Sher Khan, Muhammad Zubair alias Naik Muhamad, Malik Naeem Haider alias Waqas alias Vikki alias Haji, Ghulam Mustafa Qaisrani, Qari Muhammad Ismaeel, Saleem Zaman, Abdul Hayee, Abdullah alias Ghazali were wanted by the Punjab Police for their involvement in the Rawalpindi Peer Wadhai bombing; the Police Training School attack in Manawan, the attack on Mianwali Check-post, Sri Lankan Cricket Team attack and the suicide attack on a mourners’ procession in Dera Ghazi Khan.
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July - 14 
Punjab Government is soon going to start a search operation against suspected militants and terrorists in southern Punjab, State Minister for Interior Tasnim Ahmed Qureshi said on July 14. Talking to reporters during his visit to the Central Jail Staff Training Institute in Lahore, he said the Gover
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Punjab Government is soon going to start a search operation against suspected militants and terrorists in southern Punjab, State Minister for Interior Tasnim Ahmed Qureshi said on July 14. Talking to reporters during his visit to the Central Jail Staff Training Institute in Lahore, he said the Government had received information that terrorists were trying to launch operations in the area.
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July - 14 
The Government of Punjab on July 14 disassociated itself from a case challenging the Lahore High Court order that released the Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (the Lashkar-e-Toiba [LeT] front) chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, as it filed an application with the Supreme Court (SC) to withdraw its petition that challeng
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The Government of Punjab on July 14 disassociated itself from a case challenging the Lahore High Court order that released the Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (the Lashkar-e-Toiba [LeT] front) chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, as it filed an application with the Supreme Court (SC) to withdraw its petition that challenged the release, Daily Times reported. Appearing on notice, the Punjab Advocate General (AG) Raza Farooq informed the SC that the Punjab Government had decided to withdraw its petition against Saeed’s release, as it had insufficient evidence against him and his aide, Col (r) Nazir Ahmed. Appearing on the behalf of the federal Government, Deputy AG Shah Khawar requested the court for additional time to seek the Centre’s instructions on the issue. Accepting the request, the court reportedly adjourned the hearing until July 16.
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September - 11 September - 12
India for the time is said to have struck back with machine guns when Pakistan in the night of September 11 reportedly fired two rockets into border villages of Punjab near Wagah sector, the second such provocation in two months, reports Times of India. The unsettling attack from a belligerent neigh
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India for the time is said to have struck back with machine guns when Pakistan in the night of September 11 reportedly fired two rockets into border villages of Punjab near Wagah sector, the second such provocation in two months, reports Times of India. The unsettling attack from a belligerent neighbour came on a day when the Border Security Force (BSF) had deployed its first batch of women along the border. However, no causality was reported till news last came in at 11.45 pm, (IST) stating that Pakistan had fired three more rockets which were yet to be traced. “Earlier, two rockets were fired from the Pakistani side, one falling in Dhanoae Khurd and the other is yet to be traced,” said BSF, Inspector General (IG), Frontier, Himmat Singh. As India opened fire from Pul Kanjari end, losing patience over repeated violations during peace times between the two nations, the IG confirmed, “During my tenure, this is the first time that BSF has retaliated.” Swinging into action, Police laid down barricades on roads leading up to the border, disallowing even the media to cover the incident. Calling for an emergency flag meeting with Pakistan Rangers, sources said, BSF strongly protested the unwarranted firing. The last time Pakistan had breached border rules was in the night of July 5, when three rockets landed on the Indian side — one each in Dhandae, Baherwal and Konake — while another failed to make it and fell in the attacker’s territory near Pul Kanjari. However, Pakistan's Border Security Forces on September 12 (today) rejected a contention by their Indian counterparts that several rockets were fired into Indian Territory from across the border in the Wagah sector. A meeting between the sector commanders of Pakistan Rangers and Indian BSF over the issue remained "inconclusive", a spokesman for Pakistan Rangers said. The BSF officials had maintained that some rockets were fired from Pakistani said early this morning but the Rangers official had denied this, he said. The sector commanders met a little after 1 am (IST) following reports of three major explosions in the Wagah sector.
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October - 10 
Ajmad Farooqi of splinter fraction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has claimed responsibility for the attack on the GHQ, a private TV channel reported. A member of the fraction told the channel the Taliban would continue their subversive actions until the Government stopped the military oper
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Ajmad Farooqi of splinter fraction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) has claimed responsibility for the attack on the GHQ, a private TV channel reported. A member of the fraction told the channel the Taliban would continue their subversive actions until the Government stopped the military operation in the country’s north; held former President Pervez Musharraf accountable for his actions; forced Blackwater US private security firm to leave the country; shut down all western non-Governmental organisations in the north; and secured the immediate release of detained Taliban.
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October - 10 
Six Army personnel, including a brigadier and a lieutenant colonel, were killed and five others seriously injured when militants clad in Army uniform attacked the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Army in Rawalpindi at around 11:30am (PST) on October 10, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Direct
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Six Army personnel, including a brigadier and a lieutenant colonel, were killed and five others seriously injured when militants clad in Army uniform attacked the General Headquarters (GHQ) of the Army in Rawalpindi at around 11:30am (PST) on October 10, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director General Athar Abbas told Daily Times. He said that the highly trained militants armed with sophisticated weapons aboard a Suzuki van entered the office of the Security staff outside the premises of the General Headquarters and took 10 to 15 officials hostage. They opened fire and hurled hand grenades when they were stopped for checking at the first check post. He said that five of the 6 to 7 militants who attacked the headquarters were also killed in retaliatory fire of the Security Forces (SFs). “Five terrorists, one of whom was a suicide bomber, were killed in the ensuing gunbattle. Three to four accomplices of the terrorists, however, managed to cross over the grassy grounds unnoticed during the shootout,” Gen Abbas said. The SFs have cordoned off the entire area and a siege was continuing to arrest the terrorists alive. The slained brigadier and lieutenant colonel were identified as Anwaar and Waseem, respectively.
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October - 10 October - 11
In a successful 18-hour operation, the armed forces – in collaboration with Special Services Group commandos – killed four terrorists, arrested one and rescued 39 hostages at a security office outside the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi on October 11, ending a siege that began on October 10
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In a successful 18-hour operation, the armed forces – in collaboration with Special Services Group commandos – killed four terrorists, arrested one and rescued 39 hostages at a security office outside the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Rawalpindi on October 11, ending a siege that began on October 10, Daily Times reported. Three civilians and two Security Force (SF) personnel were killed on October 11, while seven SF personnel and three civilians were injured during the 18-hour operation – which culminated in the arrest of the ringleader, Aqeel alias Dr Osman. Although Aqeel was injured, sources said his condition is stable. Six soldiers and five terrorists had already been killed in the siege on October 10. The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director-General, Major General Athar Abbas, said that two army officials were killed and seven others injured in the commando operation. Three civilian hostages were also killed in the operation, he added. The ISPR chief said eight SF personnel, including a Brigadier and a Lieutenant Colonel, nine terrorists and three civilians were killed on October 10 and 11, while the total number of injured was 15 – 12 army personnel and three civilians. He said the operation to rescue the hostages began around 6am (PST), and continued for 45 minutes in the first phase – during which commandos rescued 30 hostages and killed four terrorists. He said the five terrorists killed in the first phase were armed with suicide vests and tried to resist the troops. “The terrorists had suicide jackets, improvised explosive devices, grenades... they wanted to blow up all the hostages and cause maximum damage,” the AFP quoted him as saying. “Terrorist Aqeel alias Dr Osman was overpowered at around 9am in an injured condition when he tried to blow himself up and the rest of the hostages ... triggering a blast in adjacent offices of the security building ... five security personnel were injured in the final phase of the operation,” he said. The siege began just before midday on October 10, when terrorists in military uniform and armed with automatic weapons and grenades drove up to the Rawalpindi compound and shot their way through a checkpoint. AFP quoted a security official as saying that Aqeel was also wanted in connection with a rocket attack on former president Pervez Musharraf in 2007 and the killing of the military’s surgeon general in February 2008. “He is a known terrorist. His name is mentioned in several cases,” the unnamed official was quoted as saying.
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October - 11 
SFs are investigating possible links between the sole surviving militant Aqeel and an attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in March 2009, said officials on October 11. ISPR chief Athar Abbas told AFP that Aqeel appeared to have the same name and alias as one of the terrorists wanted in connection w
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SFs are investigating possible links between the sole surviving militant Aqeel and an attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in March 2009, said officials on October 11. ISPR chief Athar Abbas told AFP that Aqeel appeared to have the same name and alias as one of the terrorists wanted in connection with the gun-and-grenade attack on the Sri Lankan cricket team in Lahore. Dawn has reported that security agencies have arrested at least 20 people for allegedly having links with Aqeel.
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October - 12 
Three commandos injured in the rescue operation at the GHQ in Rawalpindi died in hospital on October 12, raising the death toll in the incident to 22, a military statement said. “Three more Special Services Group (SSG) personnel who were injured in an operation yesterday to save hostages embraced ma
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Three commandos injured in the rescue operation at the GHQ in Rawalpindi died in hospital on October 12, raising the death toll in the incident to 22, a military statement said. “Three more Special Services Group (SSG) personnel who were injured in an operation yesterday to save hostages embraced martyrdom,” the statement said.
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October - 15 
Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said the gunmen had originally planned to take people hostage, as evidence suggested “they had plans for a lengthy siege”.
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Punjab Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said the gunmen had originally planned to take people hostage, as evidence suggested “they had plans for a lengthy siege”.
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October - 28 
The District Administration of Lahore has ordered that 17 Government schools in different areas of Lahore and the Punjab University be shut down for security reasons, Daily Times reported. According to a private TV channel, the District administration authorities ordered to close down the Government
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The District Administration of Lahore has ordered that 17 Government schools in different areas of Lahore and the Punjab University be shut down for security reasons, Daily Times reported. According to a private TV channel, the District administration authorities ordered to close down the Government Muslim Model High School Urdu Bazaar, Govt Victoria High School, Govt Saleem Model High School, Govt Girls' Higher Secondary School Ravi Road, Govt Chishtia Girls' High School, Cathedral High School Anarkali, Anthony High School Lawrence Road, Govt Central Model School Lower Mall, Saint Francis High School Anarkali and Sacred Heart Girls' High School Temple Road, among others.
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October - 29 
The leadership of Al Qaeda is in Pakistan, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on October 29, according to Daily Times. "I find it hard to believe that nobody in your government knows where they are and couldn’t get them if they really wanted to," she added. "Maybe that’s the case; maybe they
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The leadership of Al Qaeda is in Pakistan, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said on October 29, according to Daily Times. "I find it hard to believe that nobody in your government knows where they are and couldn’t get them if they really wanted to," she added. "Maybe that’s the case; maybe they’re not gettable. I don’t know... As far as we know, they are in Pakistan," Clinton told senior Pakistani newspaper editors in Lahore, AFP reported. Separately, Clinton also reportedly met Army chief General Ashfaq Kayani and exchanged views on a host of security-related issues.
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October - 29 
The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that the US does not have any evidence of India's involvement in Balochistan amid Pakistan's allegation that New Delhi was fomenting trouble in the province, Rediff reported. "Well, first of all, we have no evidence of that. I mean, we just have no
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The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has said that the US does not have any evidence of India's involvement in Balochistan amid Pakistan's allegation that New Delhi was fomenting trouble in the province, Rediff reported. "Well, first of all, we have no evidence of that. I mean, we just have no evidence of that," Clinton said in reply to a question that many Pakistanis believe that India is fomenting trouble in Balochistan. "So from our perspective, we believe that anything like that, any charge that might be made like that, and Balochistan, as you know, is a very volatile region," she said during her interaction with Pakistani editors in Lahore on October 29-night. Clinton said she has not seen any evidence from Pakistan about India's involvement in Balochistan.
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November - 17 
The Army has captured most of the population centres and disrupted the terrorists’ food supply line in South Waziristan, military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said on November 17. “The myth has been broken that this was a graveyard for empires and it would be a graveyard for the army,” Abbas
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The Army has captured most of the population centres and disrupted the terrorists’ food supply line in South Waziristan, military spokesman Major General Athar Abbas said on November 17. “The myth has been broken that this was a graveyard for empires and it would be a graveyard for the army,” Abbas told reporters in Sararogha. “Major town and population centres have been secured,” he added. An Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) statement said the Security Forces (SFs) had completely cleared Sararogha. “Sararogha has been completely cleared and fully under control of security forces,” it said. They secured important feature point 1665, south of Janata, and conducted sanitisation of Khazhikai, Shuza Sar and defused six IEDs. The SFs also consolidated positions at Ghundai Gur, Tikrai Sar, Sultano, Pungai, Ladha Fort and Bangel Khel, and carried out search operations at Gani Khel, Khaikaeh Narai. The ISPR statement said the forces were strengthening their positions on the Razmak-Makeen axis. They also cleared Blanki Sar and destroyed six Taliban bunkers.
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December - 4 
According to the AFP, Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters that the Taliban militants entered the mosque disguised as worshippers. Claiming responsibility for the attack, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) said the Parade Lane mosque was similar to Masjid-e-Zarrar built in Madina by the mu
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According to the AFP, Interior Minister Rehman Malik told reporters that the Taliban militants entered the mosque disguised as worshippers. Claiming responsibility for the attack, the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) said the Parade Lane mosque was similar to Masjid-e-Zarrar built in Madina by the munafiqeen (infidel), and was "demolished on the orders of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)". Talking to BBC, the TTP leader Waliur Rehman Mehsud said his men attacked senior army officers. "Our militants attacked the military officers (our primary target) and we will continue to attack the army," he said, adding that the civilians killed in the attack were relatives of army personnel and their deaths "did not matter," Daily Times reported.
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December - 4 
The Superintendent of Police (Potohar Town), Kamran Adil, said there were at least four terrorists who blew themselves up inside and outside the mosque during the attack. "We believe the total number of these terrorists, who came on a 2002 model grey colour Toyota Corolla car, could be seven. Four h
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The Superintendent of Police (Potohar Town), Kamran Adil, said there were at least four terrorists who blew themselves up inside and outside the mosque during the attack. "We believe the total number of these terrorists, who came on a 2002 model grey colour Toyota Corolla car, could be seven. Four have blown themselves up. We are trying to ascertain our suspicions that there is at least another terrorist who has been killed and is among the dead counted so far, while at least two are hiding somewhere in the area. We are trying to track them down and arrest or kill them," he said.
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December - 8 
The Police and Bomb Disposal Squad personnel said that the twin blasts at Moon Market in Allama Iqbal Town of Lahore were suicide attacks. Iqbal Town Police claimed to have recovered the remains of two suicide attackers. Iqbal Town Superintendent of Police (SP) Ali Nasir Rizvi told Daily Times that
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The Police and Bomb Disposal Squad personnel said that the twin blasts at Moon Market in Allama Iqbal Town of Lahore were suicide attacks. Iqbal Town Police claimed to have recovered the remains of two suicide attackers. Iqbal Town Superintendent of Police (SP) Ali Nasir Rizvi told Daily Times that a head and limbs recovered from the site of the blasts are believed to be of two suicide attackers, who according to initial reports were not more than 18 years old and belonged to southern Punjab. Civil Defence District Officer Mazhar Ahmed while talking to Daily Times supported the version of the SP and termed both attacks as suicide bombings. He said the material used in the twin blasts included ball bearings that are used in suicide vests. Mazhar said that 10 kilogrammes of explosives were used in the blasts. He said there was also possibility that some hand grenades were also used in the blasts, which targeted the building in a 150-yard radius.
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December - 13 
On December 13, the religious leaders from various schools of thought in Punjab declared suicide attacks as ‘haram’ (prohibited) and promised to cooperate with the Punjab Government in the fight against terrorism, according to Daily Times. They expressed this commitment in a unanimous resolution, pa
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On December 13, the religious leaders from various schools of thought in Punjab declared suicide attacks as ‘haram’ (prohibited) and promised to cooperate with the Punjab Government in the fight against terrorism, according to Daily Times. They expressed this commitment in a unanimous resolution, passed after a meeting at the Chief Minister’s Secretariat in Lahore. The resolution, presented by Muttahida Ulema Board Chairman Sahibzada Fazle Karim, stated that suicide bombings had no place in Islam. It said the board wanted to see the country on the road to development and peace. Meanwhile, talking to journalists, Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif urged religious leaders to play a major role in countering the challenges being faced by the country.
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December - 30 
The year 2009 proved to be another bloody year of the decade for media in Pakistan in which 10 journalists, in 163 cases of direct attacks on media, paid the ultimate price of practicing a difficult trade in the backdrop of rising terrorism and militancy and were killed in the line of duty, accordin
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The year 2009 proved to be another bloody year of the decade for media in Pakistan in which 10 journalists, in 163 cases of direct attacks on media, paid the ultimate price of practicing a difficult trade in the backdrop of rising terrorism and militancy and were killed in the line of duty, according to Dawn. Of these 10 journalists, four were killed in Punjab, three in the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and one each in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), Balochistan and Islamabad, according to the annual research on the state of media in Pakistan, released on December 30 by Intermedia, a Pakistani media development organisation that focuses on media research, advocacy and training. The total 163 cases included murders, assaults, abductions, explicit threats, censorship cases and attacks on media properties and establishments. Punjab bore the brunt of these attacks with 54 cases and the NWFP a close behind with 52, while Islamabad was the surprise third biggest victim of attacks on media with 28 cases. Sindh recorded 12 attacks, six attacks each were recorded in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) and FATA, and three in Balochistan. Ten journalists were kidnapped in 2009, four in NWFP, two in Islamabad and one each in Balochistan, FATA, Punjab and Sindh. The report also documented at least 24 cases of assaults on working journalists across the country, in which 70 journalists were injured — 36 in Punjab, 12 in Islamabad, 10 in the NWFP, seven in Sindh and five in PoK. At least 28 journalists received threats in person or over the phone. Of these, nine journalists were in Islamabad, eight in the NWFP, seven in Sindh, and one in FATA. The Intermedia report also documented at least 35 cases of official gag orders, censorship or restrictions on publication or broadcast in 2009. Of these, the highest number of cases, 23, was in the NWFP, four in Punjab, three in Islamabad and one each in Sindh, Balochistan, FATA and PoK. Ten cases of physical and armed attacks were reported on media property and establishments, exemplified by the suicide attack on the Peshawar Press Club on December 22, 2009. Of these attacks, four were in the NWFP, two each in Fata and Punjab and one each in Islamabad and PoK. “At least 45 journalists have been killed in Pakistan in the last five years, several by suspected militants, but this is the first time that suicide squads of terrorists have targeted media persons as a specific, overt target, indicating a dramatic increase in the level of threats facing the media in the country,” Adnan Rehmat, executive director of Intermedia, said.
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