Peshawar attack: Pakistani Christian security guard killed
By Dan Wooding, Founder of ASSIST News Service
PESHAWAR, PAKISTAN (ANS – September 3, 2016)
-- A Pakistani Christian security guard was killed on Friday (September
2, 2016) after an early morning attack on a Christian colony near the
north-western Pakistani city of Peshawar.
Four
suicide bombers, carrying automatic weapons, were waiting at the gate
to the colony, which was locked every night. When Samuel Masih, 55, went
to open it at around 5.30am, they shot and killed him. Two other guards
were injured, caught in the crossfire as the attackers clashed with
police.
“I
personally visited the area and the army have cordoned off it and
search is going on,” parliamentarian Fredrick Azeem Ghauri told World
Watch Monitor (https://www.worldwatchmonitor.org/).
“The terrorists had water and food with them, which shows that they had
planned a massacre on a large scale, but God has been kind to save the
community. One suicide bomber entered an under-construction house and
blew himself up. Luckily there was no-one there, so everyone remained
safe.”
The
Church of Pakistan’s Diocese of Peshawar released a statement, calling
Masih a “brave man – indeed a hero and a martyr, who saved many lives.”
The Rt. Revd. Humphrey S. Peters condemned the “brutal act of terrorism against the Christian community.”
Fr.
Yunis Riaz, priest of the St. Michael Church inside the colony, told
Fides: “People are afraid; we are mourning Samuel’s death. About 30
Christian families live in the colony ... They are simple people, most
of them work as cleaners in public offices. They are people with a
strong faith: we will overcome this.
“The
Taliban indiscriminately hit civilian and military targets, schools and
families: they want to destroy peace and have visibility, threatening
institutions. We will remain united in protecting social and religious
peace. As Christians, we will do our part, praying and working
peacefully, building peace in our daily lives every day.”
World
Watch Monitor said that the Warsak Dam colony, where the attack took
place, twelve miles outside Peshawar, is not far from the Army Public
School, where 141 people, including 132 students, were killed after a
December 2014 attack. The residents have been advised to remain in their
homes.
An
Islamist group linked to the Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility
for this the attack, saying it was a response to recent Army claims that
it has pushed back terrorist violence. Unconfirmed reports said the
group had intended to attack Army “targets,” but ended up moving to the
Christian Colony instead.
The
news service added that on Easter Sunday this year, suicide bombers
from the same group, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, attacked a park in Lahore as
Christian families celebrated after church services. At least 74 died,
including 29 children: the group said it had “targeted Christians
celebrating Easter.”
This
attack also comes just three weeks before the third anniversary (on
September 22nd) of an attack by twin suicide bombers on All Saints
Anglican Church in Peshawar, in which at least 96 died, including many
children. The two bombers attacked as families were leaving the church
service and Sunday school.
“The
latest attack may also have been a reaction to the recent Pakistan
Supreme Court decision to reject the appeals of 16 people sentenced to
death for terrorism, two of whom are believed to have been involved in
the 2014 Army Public School bombing,” said World Watch Monitor.
Meanwhile,
also on Friday, a suicide bomber killed at least 12 people and injured
more than 50 in an attack on a court in Mardan, 31 miles east of
Peshawar. A BBC reporter in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, the local province, said
that the same Taliban splinter group claimed responsibility. It said
that the Pakistani courts, derived from the British colonial legal
system, are “un-Islamic.”
Photo
captions: 1) Pakistani volunteers carry an injured man who arrived from
Mardan, at a local hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan, Friday, Sept. 2,
2016. 2) Medical staff and troops examine the damage at the Christian
colony. 3) Troops patrol the streets following the attack. 4) Dan
Wooding recording a radio show.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning winning author,
broadcaster and journalist who was born in Nigeria, West Africa, of
British missionary parents, Alfred and Anne Wooding, who then worked
with the Sudan Interior Mission, now known as SIM. He now lives in
Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he has been married for
some 53 years. They have two sons, Andrew and Peter, and six
grandchildren who all live in the UK. Dan is the founder and
international director of the ASSIST (Aid to Special Saints in Strategic
Times) and the ASSIST News Service (ANS), and is also the author of
some 45 books. He also has a weekly radio show (Front Page Radio) and two TV shows (Windows on the World-- with Mark Ellis, and Inside Hollywood with Dan Wooding) all based in Southern California. You can write to Dan Wooding at assistnews@aol.com .
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