Over 50 Killed In Pakistan Police Training College Attack

Gunmen wearing explosive vests raided a police training college near the southwestern city of Quetta late on Monday, killing at least 58 people and wounding more than 120.

The brazen attack on the Balochistan Police College ended after security forces launched a military counter-operation against the militants, who took hostages at the facility where some 700 cadets are based. Most of the casualties were police cadets.

"They first targeted the watch tower sentry, and after exchanging fire, killed him and were able to enter the academy grounds," Sarfaraz Bugti, the home minister of Balochistan province, told reporters.

One of the attackers was killed by security forces and two others detonated their suicide vests, resulting in casualties, he said. Earlier, authorities put the number of militants at between four and six.

Major General Sher Afgan, chief of the paramilitary Frontier Corps in Balochistan, said "the attack was over in around three hours after we arrived."

The "Islamic State" claimed credit for the attack, the third deadiest in Pakistan this year. However, authorities blamed the Al-Alimi faction of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a militant group tied to the Pakistani Taliban. Bugti tweeted the militants were in contact with "handlers" in Afghanistan. There was no claim yet from the Pakistani Talilban.

Balochistan has been the center of a low-level Baloch separatist insurgency and the target of Islamist militant attacks in the past. Quetta is a known base for the Taliban.

Earlier on Monday, gunmen killed two customs officers and wounded a third near the town of Surab, about 145 kilometers south of Quetta. Also on Monday, gunmen killed an intelligence officer in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. That attack was claimed by the Pakistani Taliban.

On Sunday, gunmen from the Baloch Liberation Army killed two coast guards and a civilian in a coastal town in the same province.

A suicide bombing on a hospital in Quetta in August killed 73 people, many of them lawyers mourning a colleague who had been fatally shot. Both the "Islamic State" and a faction of the Pakistani Taliban claimed the attack.

(DW)