Army Public School survivors leave on 'healing trip'
Ten students and two teachers who escaped the bloodshed have been sent on a 10-day trip to China
PHOTO: AFP
PESHAWAR:
A group of students and teachers who survived a Taliban massacre at an army-run school left on Monday for a trip to China aimed at healing the mental scars of their ordeal.
Heavily-armed militants stormed the Army Public School in Peshawar in December, killing 150 people, most of them children.
The carnage horrified the world and left many survivors badly traumatised. Now 10 students and two teachers who escaped the bloodshed have been sent on a 10-day trip to help them recover.
RELATED POST: 10 day visit: APS survivors to leave for China trip
"The basic aim of the visit is to divert the attention of the survivors," from the nightmare, a security official told AFP.
An official at the Army Public School confirmed the visit and told AFP that "more survivors will be sent in coming days to other countries".
Both the officials spoke on condition of anonymity.
The officials said the decision was taken after psychiatrists suggested that survivors need long-term therapy and mental health counselling.
The security official in Peshawar said the parents of children killed in the attack would be sent to on pilgrimage Saudi Arabia in the coming days.
A group of students and teachers who survived a Taliban massacre at an army-run school left on Monday for a trip to China aimed at healing the mental scars of their ordeal.
Heavily-armed militants stormed the Army Public School in Peshawar in December, killing 150 people, most of them children.
The carnage horrified the world and left many survivors badly traumatised. Now 10 students and two teachers who escaped the bloodshed have been sent on a 10-day trip to help them recover.
RELATED POST: 10 day visit: APS survivors to leave for China trip
"The basic aim of the visit is to divert the attention of the survivors," from the nightmare, a security official told AFP.
An official at the Army Public School confirmed the visit and told AFP that "more survivors will be sent in coming days to other countries".
Both the officials spoke on condition of anonymity.
The officials said the decision was taken after psychiatrists suggested that survivors need long-term therapy and mental health counselling.
The security official in Peshawar said the parents of children killed in the attack would be sent to on pilgrimage Saudi Arabia in the coming days.