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  Cleric: 70 killed at Pakistan mosque
Last updated: 2007-07-07


Cleric: 70 killed at Pakistan mosque
2007-07-07

Category
Taliban
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Al Qaeda
Nations
Pakistan
City
Islamabad
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Pervez Musharraf
The top cleric at a besieged mosque in Pakistan's capital accused security forces on Saturday of killing more than 70 of his students, but said he and his supporters preferred martyrdom to capture.

Explosions and intense gunfire continued overnight and early Saturday as thousands of troops ringing the Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, attempted to end a five-day standoff but held back from an all-out assault.

Although the government says only 19 people have died since Tuesday, Abdul Rashid Ghazi, the mosque's defiant cleric, told the local Geo television channel that more than 70 of his students had been slain by government gunfire.

"There are 70 to 80 bodies of our students," he said in a claim which could not be independently verified.

The siege has added to the woes of President Gen. Pervez Musharraf, who faces a gathering storm of domestic Islamic extremism as well as a popular backlash from his bungled attempt at firing the country's chief justice.

Authorities on Saturday also were investigating a possible assassination attempt against him after shots were fired as Musharraf's plane took off from a military base near the capital.

Musharraf was flying from Chaklala Air Base in Rawalpindi on Friday morning when shots rang out from a neighborhood that lies directly under the flight path, officials and witnesses said.

If confirmed, the attack would be at least the fourth attempt on Musharraf's life since his decision to side with the United States in its war on terror enraged Taliban and al-Qaida-linked radicals in Pakistan.

It was not clear whether the incident was linked to the siege, but street protests organized by radical Islamic groups have been staged daily since the government began its strike against the mosque Tuesday.

Troops surrounded the mosque and an adjoining women's seminary after tensions between government security forces and Islamic students -- who have sought to impose Taliban-style rule in the city -- erupted into deadly street clashes.

Militant students had streamed out of the mosque Tuesday to confront security forces deployed there following the kidnapping of six alleged Chinese prostitutes. The brief abduction drew a protest from Beijing, and proved to be the last straw following a string of provocations by the mosque stretching back six months.

While more than 1,200 people, mainly students from the mosque's two Islamic schools, have fled the complex, officials say up to 100 armed militants and an unknown number of students remain inside.

Ghazi, who has sought safe passage for himself and his followers, reiterated Saturday that he would not surrender.

"We are ready to lay down arms, but we should not be arrested," he said, adding, "We are ready to be martyred."

Pakistan's Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao rejected the conditional surrender offer, insisting that Ghazi would have to face the courts.

A delegation of clerics was expected to meet with Ghazi on Saturday to persuade him to surrender, according to Shah Abdul Aziz, a lawmaker who is closely associated with the cleric.

Before dawn, police seized control of one of Ghazi's seminaries in another area of Islamabad.

The action against the Jamia Faridia seminary in an upscale neighborhood was taken on government orders, said Mohammed Idress, a senior police officer.

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