http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/01/01/7-pakistan-charity-workers-shot-dead-five-female-teachers-among-those-killed/

7 Pakistan charity workers shot dead – Five female teachers among those killed 
 
SWABI, Pakistan: Relatives mourn next to a body of a charity worker following 
an attack by gunmen yesterday. — AFP

PESHAWAR: Six women and a man working for a Pakistani health and education 
charity involved in vaccinations were shot dead on their way home from a 
community centre yesterday, officials said. Police said they were investigating 
whether there was any link to the Taleban or other Islamist militants, who have 
been blamed for past attacks on charity workers and on health education 
projects in particular. The attack took place about 65 km northwest of the 
capital in the Swabi district.

The victims were all Pakistanis and worked at a local centre called Ujalla, 
which runs a school and a health clinic. Five of the women were teachers, the 
sixth was a health worker and the man worked as a health technician, officials 
said. They were being driven home from the village community centre when they 
were attacked, said Abdul Rashid Khan, Swabi police chief. “Four men came on 
two motorbikes. They attacked their van, a Toyota HiAce. They opened fire to 
the right and left of the van and fled,” Khan told AFP. “Six women and a man 
have died. The driver is injured,” he added. Police said the women were aged 20 
to 35 and the male health technician was 52.

Doctor Mohammad Sheerin at the local Bacha Khan medical complex said one man 
had been critically wounded and evacuated to the northwestern city of Peshawar. 
There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Police said it was 
investigating whether there was a link to Islamist militancy but the head of 
the charity said the organisation had not been threatened despite working on 
polio immunisations. The Taleban banned polio vaccinations in the tribal region 
of Waziristan, condemning the campaign as a cover for espionage after the 
jailing of a doctor who helped the CIA find Osama bin Laden using a hepatitis 
vaccination programme. Last month nine polio vaccination workers were shot dead 
in a string of attacks in Karachi and the northwest.

The Taleban denied responsibility for the killings, but the deaths prompted the 
UN children’s agency and the World Health Organization to suspend work on polio 
campaigns. Javed Akhtar, executive director of the charity, said the 
organisation provides vaccines, including during last month’s campaign, but 
said he did not know if its polio work was a motive for the attack. “The centre 
is involved in a child immunisation program. It also provides polio drops,” he 
said, adding that his organisation had received Western funds, including from 
the German government, through a Pakistani poverty alleviation fund. Other 
charity workers in the northwest called for protection. “Schools and NGOs have 
been threatened in the recent past.

Several government schools had been bombed in the last several months,” said 
Rooh ul-Amin, who heads an umbrella organisation of charities in Swabi. He said 
eight months ago the guest house where he receives visitors was bombed and 
another bomb was found near his office four months ago. Idrees Kamal, the 
coordinator of Pakhtunkhwa Civil Society Network (PCSN), demanded that the 
killers be arrested, and called for protection and compensation. “PCSN will 
formulate a joint strategy to tackle the matter,” he said in a statement. Last 
month a Swedish woman charity worker died after being shot in the chest in 
Lahore where she worked for the US-founded Full Gospel Assemblies, which runs 
charities including a technical training institute and adult literacy centre. 
In Aug 2011 US development worker Warren Weinstein was kidnapped after gunmen 
tricked their way into his Lahore home. Pakistani officials believe he is being 
held by Al-Qaeda and Taleban extremists in Pakistan’s lawless northwest.

In April 2012, a British Muslim Red Cross worker was beheaded after being 
kidnapped in the southwestern city of Quetta. Pakistan has been battling a 
homegrown Taleban insurgency for five years, as well as a separatist Baluch 
uprising in the southwest. It also suffers from routine attacks blamed on a 
series of hardline Islamist factions. Islamabad says more than 35,000 people 
have been killed as a result of terrorism in the country since the 9/11 attacks 
on the United States. — AFP


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