Blasts, hit besieged Red mosque as militants ignore surrender plea
PAKISTAN: The siege of a radical mosque in Pakistan’s capital entered
its third day Friday after troops rocked the complex with gunfire and
explosions and Islamic militants holed up inside rejected government
calls for unconditional surrender.
The army appeared to be holding back from a large-scale assault. The
government was keen to avoid a bloodbath that would further damage
President Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s embattled administration and said
troops would not storm the mosque while women and children were inside.
Two dozen parents and other family members waited anxiously behind
security barriers some 200 meters (yards) from the mosque, with about 10
allowed to approach the shrine’s entrance.
During lulls in the fighting, some parents have approached the
mosque, handed notes to those inside with the names of their children,
who have then emerged.
Gunfire rang out around the mosque before dawn and again later Friday
morning. Armed troops and barbed wire coils on the streets near the
mosque prevented journalists from going near the scene.
There were no immediate reports of injuries and it was not possible
to determine who initiated the latest bout of shooting.
Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao said soldiers were trying to
blast holes in the walls of the fortress-like compound of the mosque and
an adjoining seminary for girls, seeking to wear down the defenders’
resolve and force a surrender without a bloody battle.
But the mosque’s deputy leader, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, remained inside
with die-hard followers and rejected the government’s call for an
unconditional surrender.
Ghazi told a local television station that he and his followers were
willing to lay down their arms and end the stand-off, but on condition
that he and his followers are not arrested and that he be allowed time
to move his ailing mother and sister-in-law to another location outside
the mosque.
Deputy Information Minister Tariq Azim said some of the more than
1,100 supporters who had fled the mosque and madrassa told officials
that Ghazi had retreated to a cellar along with 20 female “hostages” and
that the holdouts had “large quantities of automatic weapons.”
Officials say they are also armed with hand grenades, explosives and
homemade gasoline bombs. Azim said there would be no more negotiations.
“Enough time has already been wasted. It has to be total,
unconditional surrender,” he said, but added: “As long as there are
women and children inside, I don’t think that we will go in.”
Soldiers backed by armoured vehicles and helicopters surrounded the
Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, before dawn Wednesday, a day after the start
of clashes between security forces and radical followers of the mosque
that have killed at least 19 people.
The violence brought to a head a six-month standoff between
Pakistan’s U.S.-backed government and its top cleric, Maulana Abdul Aziz,
who challenged Musharraf with a drive to impose Taliban-style Islamic
law in Islamabad.
Aziz, who is Ghazi’s brother, was caught Wednesday as he tried to
escape the complex disguised in a woman’s top-to-toe burqa and
high-heeled shoes.
He said on state television that as many as 700 women and about 250
men remained inside the complex, armed with more than a dozen AK-47
assault rifles.
“If they can get out quietly they should go, or they can surrender if
they want to,” Aziz said.
“I saw after coming out that the siege is very intense. ... Our
companions will not be able to stay for long.”
Several explosions were heard amid intense gunfire before dusk
Thursday, sending a plume of black smoke into the sky.
A leader inside the mosque accused troops of firing several mortar
rounds that killed 27 female students.
Sherpao insisted no mortars were fired and said the alleged
casualties were “just their claims.”
Islamabad, Friday, AP |