Nanga Parbat attack: Attackers identified, but search continues

Ten attackers are residents of Diamer Valley, three are from Mansehra and the rest are from Kohistan.


Shabbir Mir June 26, 2013
16 militants involved in the attack have been identified. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

GILGIT: Police on Wednesday said that the 16 militants involved in the killing of the 10 tourists and their Pakistani guide at the foot of the Nanga Parbat have been identified. 

"All of them are locals. Ten are residents of the Diamer Valley, three are from Mansehra and the rest are from Kohistan," said police chief Usman Zakaria.

Addressing press officials in the chief minister office with chief secretary Gilgit Baltistan Munir Ahmad Badini, Zakaria said that it's a breakthrough for the law enforcing agencies who have been working tirelessly to resolve the case.

"There are reports that the assailants had been trained in FATA and had ties with certain banned militant outfits," said chief secretary G-B.

The names of the outfits will become known once the culprits are caught and investigated, he said.

"We also want to give credit to Diamer Jirga who proved instrumental in identifying the militants,” Badini said, adding that the militants were still in the valley and believed to be in groups of two of three.

Zakaria said that members of the jirga were flown in via army helicopters so that they could help divulge information related to the location of the accused.

Gunmen dressed as paramilitary forces killed 10 foreign tourists on June 23 in an unprecedented attack in the Himalayas of Gilgit-Baltistan. The gunmen stormed into a base camp, killing Chinese and Ukrainian climbers in an area of the far-flung north not previously associated with violence or militancy.

COMMENTS (33)

My Views | 10 years ago | Reply

Good work, but frankly, I can't digest the news of identifying people and arresting the real culprits.

bigsaf | 10 years ago | Reply

I give credit to the local people mostly from the G-B who have always known there were religious sectarian extremists from Mansehra and Kohistan, more coming from FATA and elsewhere, and have suffered atrocities by their hands. They were always under constant threat due to their different religious and ideological backgrounds, but the authorities, be it out of prejudice, fear, sympathy or outright support, looked the other way on all these militants and the plight of the native local people.

Because this became an international event, the local authorities had no choice but to do something.

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