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Volunteers carry an injured policeman to a hospital following an attack on a police compound in Karachi, Pakistan on Friday. Photo: AFP

Pakistani Taliban claims suicide attack on Karachi police station; 7 dead

  • Three security force members and a civilian were killed. Two suicide bombers were killed and at least one blew himself up, officials said
  • President Arif Alvi condemned the attack, while Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif paid tribute to security forces for the successful operation
Pakistan

Militants launched a deadly suicide attack on the police headquarters of Pakistan’s largest city on Friday, officials said, as the sound of gunfire and explosions rocked the heart of Karachi for several hours.

Three security force members and a civilian were killed and 18 security force members wounded, according to government officials and Ghulam Nabi Memon, police chief for the southern Sindh province where Karachi is located. Two suicide bombers were killed and at least one blew himself up after entering the police building, officials added.

Pakistani Taliban in a brief statement claimed responsibility.

Security staff and ambulances are seen near the site of an attack on a police compound in Karachi, Pakistan on Friday. Photo: AFP

Murtaza Wahab, a government adviser, confirmed that police and paramilitary forces in a joint operation had cleared the police building within three hours of the attack late on Friday.

“I confirm that the operation against the terrorists is over,” said Wahab.

President Arif Alvi in a statement condemned the attack in Karachi, which is Pakistan’s chief commercial city, while Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif paid tribute to security forces for the successful operation.

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Earlier, television footage showed officers surrounding the city’s central police station as residents reported the sound of explosions and the gunfire.

Pakistan’s Interior Minister Rana Sanaullah Khan said some of the militants threw hand grenades as they tried to force their way into the police headquarters.

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in militant attacks since November when Pakistani Taliban ended a months-long ceasefire with the government.

Pakistan’s outlawed Tehrik-e-Taliban are a separate group but are allies of the Taliban in Afghanistan, who seized power there more than a year ago as US and Nato troops withdrew. The Taliban takeover in Afghanistan emboldened Pakistani militants, whose top leaders and fighters are hiding across the border.

Ambulances shift victims of an attack by gunmen targeting a police station in Karachi, Pakistan on Friday. Photo: EPA-EFE

The brazen assault on Karachi’s police headquarters comes two weeks after a suicide bomber disguised as a policeman killed 101 people at a mosque in the northwestern city of Peshawar.

Authorities blamed the TTP for orchestrating last month’s mosque bombing and Sarbakaf Mohmand, a TTP commander, claimed responsibility for it.

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