Fresh curfews imposed in Pakistan after sectarian clashes

Authorities imposed curfew and deployed troops in Kohat and Hangu district after three people were killed in a sectarian clash on Monday.

November 18, 2013 12:34 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 07:58 pm IST - Islamabad

Pakistani Sunni Muslims carry the casket of a victim of Friday's sectarian clashes during funeral prayers in Rawalpindi on Sunday. Photo: AP

Pakistani Sunni Muslims carry the casket of a victim of Friday's sectarian clashes during funeral prayers in Rawalpindi on Sunday. Photo: AP

Authorities imposed curfews and deployed troops in two areas of northwest Pakistan on Monday after three people were killed during a sectarian clash, police said.

The violence occurred in Kohat city, where members of a hardline Sunni Muslim group, Ahle Sunnat Waljamaat, were holding a rally to protest a sectarian clash in Rawalpindi city on Friday that killed 10 people, including at least eight Sunnis, police officer Fazal Naeem Khan said.

Shooting broke out during Monday’s rally killing three people, including a policeman and two civilians, Mr. Khan said. It was unclear if the civilians who were killed were members of Ahle Sunnat Waljamaat. The Sunnis then clashed with police and Shiites, and several shops were set on fire, he added.

Authorities responded by deploying troops and imposing a curfew in Kohat district and neighboring Hangu district, Mr. Khan said.

Rawalpindi curfew lifted

The development came shortly after officials on Monday lifted a curfew in Rawalpindi that had been imposed after the clashes there on Friday, police officer Mohammad Amir said. Army troops will continue to patrol the city for several more days, and there is still a ban on more than four people assembling in one place, he said.

The sectarian clash in Rawalpindi occurred when hundreds of Shiites were holding a procession to mark Ashoura, one of the sect’s most important religious occasions. The Shiites clashed with members of an Islamic seminary affiliated with Ahle Sunnat Waljamaat.

Ten people were killed in the clash and 56 were wounded, said Rana Sanaullah, the Law Minister for Punjab province, where Rawalpindi is located.

At least eight of the dead were Sunni Muslims. The identities of the other two were not made clear.

Outbursts of sectarian violence occur regularly in Pakistan. Hardliners from the Sunni majority who consider Shiites to be heretics have targeted the sect with bombs and shootings, with Shiite attacks on Sunnis less common, at least in recent years.

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