Man from Ahmadi community killed near Lahore: police

Police says four gunmen rode up to the pharmacy owned by victim, Ikram Ullah, and sprayed him with bullets

PHOTO: REUTERS

LAHORE:
Gunmen on motorcycles shot dead a 37-year-old pharmacy owner from the Ahmadi sect in Taunsa near Lahore, police said Thursday, the latest attack on one of the country's most persecuted minorities.

Police said four gunmen on two motorcycles rode up to the drug store owned by the victim, Ikram Ullah, and sprayed him with bullets before fleeing.

"Ikram Ullah was killed on the spot while assailants fled on their motorcycles," Saleem Niazi, a senior local police officer told AFP.

Read: Nabbed: Ahmadi worship place attackers in detention

Police are searching for the attackers, he said, adding that the murder seemed religiously motivated.


Saleem Ud Din, a community leader, condemned the killing.

"Continuous, seditious propaganda against Ahmadis all over the country is a primary reason of these kinds of incidents," Din said in a statement.

Ahmadis were declared non-Muslims by the government in 1974 because of their belief in a prophet after Muhammad. They are frequent victims of discrimination and violent assaults, but it is rare for suspects to be convicted for attacks against them.

Read: Act of terror: Policeman guarding Ahmadi place of worship shot

Eleven members of the sect were murdered for their faith in 2014 and authorities failed to apprehend any of the killers, a report said April, highlighting growing intolerance toward the sect.

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