Gunmen kill two election campaigners in DI Khan: Police

There was no immediate claim of responsibility.


Afp April 15, 2013
Taliban militants have vowed to target secular parties running in the May 11 general elections and attacks in the northwest over the weekend left one person dead and four wounded. PHOTO: FILE

PESHAWAR: Gunmen killed two election campaigners in Dera Ismail Khan on Monday, police said, the latest in a series of attacks ahead of historic polls next month.

The attackers ambushed a car carrying workers of independent candidate Abdul Rahim Burki in Dera Ismail Khan district, police chief Khalid Sohail said.

Taliban militants have vowed to target secular parties running in the May 11 general elections and attacks in the northwest over the weekend left one person dead and four wounded.

"The assailants opened fire on the car, its driver lost control and the vehicle hit a roadside tree," Sohail told AFP.

"Two workers were killed and three wounded," he said, adding that the gunmen fled on a motorbike.

Another police official confirmed the attack and the fatalities and said the injured workers were out of danger.

There are fears that militant violence will mar the national and regional elections on May 11, which will mark the country's first democratic transition of power after a civilian government has served a full term in office.

Burki is contesting a seat in South Waziristan, which is under military control. Most of the population fled after a military operation expelled Taliban and Al-Qaeda linked militants.

He told AFP that more than 80 percent of his voters were living in Dera Ismail Khan and nearby Tank districts, though their votes will count in the South Waziristan constituency.

Burki said the car was clearly identified as connected to his campaign but he had no idea who the attackers were.

"This is my first election. I have no party affiliation and I received no threats from any group so far," he told AFP.

"It appears they had been waiting to target the vehicle."

There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan said it was behind two attacks on Sunday and the killing of a candidate for outgoing coalition partner the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), the first to die in the election campaign, on Thursday.

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