Army School Hit, Terror Group Says Only Older Kids Targeted

By the time the nine-hour siege ended here, 145 people, including the terrorists, were killed and 121 others injured.It was the worst attack on children anywhere in the world since the Beslan carnage by Chechen Islamist rebels in 2004 that had claimed 385 lives. Military spokesman Major General Asim Saleem Bajwa said the Tehrik-e-Taliban attack on the Army Public School and Degree College was carried out by seven terrorists wearing suicide jackets. “The ration and ammunition which they brought along was sufficient for several days,“ he said.
At the time of the attack, he said, around 1,100 students and staff members were in the school. He said the Special Services Group (SSG) rescued around 960 students and their teachers. The dead included the school's woman principal Tahira Qazi. Another woman teacher was burned to death.
Claiming responsibility , Pakistani Taliban spokesman Muhammad Umar Kho rasani said, “We selected the army school for the attack because the government is targeting our families and women. We want them to feel the pain.“ He said they had issued instructions to the attackers not to harm “small children“. The Pakistani Taliban terrorists who attacked the Army Public School and Degree College here on Tuesday had planted improvised explosive devices on the premises making rescue operations difficult and leading to a nearly day-long gunbattle.
Dressed in uniforms of paramilitary force, the attackers entered the school premises on Warsak Road around 10am. A security official said many of the casualties were caused by suicide blasts. Taliban spokesman Muhammad Umar Khorasani said, “We took this extreme step as revenge. We will target every institution linked to the army unless they stop operations and the extra-judicial killing of our detainees.“ “We have instructed our men not to harm small children even if they are the sons of senior military or civilian leaders,“ he claimed.
“When the firing started, students ran to their classrooms. The militants were entering every class and killing children,“ Mudassir Awan, a worker at the school, said. Aamir Ali, a second-year student who survived the attack, said, “I was sitting with my classmates in the corridor when firing began. We rushed to the classroom but were soon chased by two clean-shaven gunmen, dressed in uniforms of Frontier Constabulary , a paramilitary force. They told us to read `kalima' and then started firing indiscriminately. All my classmates were killed but I survived.“
Waqarullah Khattak, a teacher, said he told students to lie down on the floor when they heard gunshots. “There was blood everywhere, limbs and pieces of children's flesh could be seen where the bombers blew themselves up,“ a security official said. “They were keen on killing as many students as possible.“