Police officer opens fire at girls' school bus in Pakistan, killing 1, injuring 5

The undated file photo shows guns held by police officers inside a police vehicle. (AFP)
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Updated 16 May 2023
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Police officer opens fire at girls' school bus in Pakistan, killing 1, injuring 5

  • The officer, Alam Khan, was immediately arrested, being questioned for what prompted him to fire at bus 
  • Khan was on security duty at the school because of concerns of possible militant attacks, the police say 

 PESHAWAR: A police officer tasked with protecting a private school for girls in northwestern Pakistan on Tuesday opened fire at a school bus carrying teachers and students, killing an 8-year-old girl and injuring five others, officials said. 

The shooting happened in the Swat Valley in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Senior police official Nasir Satti said officer Alam Khan was immediately arrested. He said the shooting was not a militant attack. 

Satti said officers were questioning Khan to determine what prompted him to fire at the bus as it was leaving the school that serves girls up to age 17. He said four students and a woman who was on the bus were injured in the shooting. 

Satti said Khan was on security duty at the school because of concerns of possible militant attacks. 

The Swat Valley was the stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban, formally called the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, until 2019 when security forces cleared the region of militants after military operations. 

Gun violence targeting children is rare in Pakistan. However, nearly 150 people, mostly students, were killed in 2014 when TTP militants attacked a school in Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Since then, authorities have deployed police at schools across the country, especially in the volatile northwest where the Pakistani Taliban have stepped up attacks on security forces in recent months. 

The Pakistani Taliban are a separate group but also a close ally of the Afghan Taliban, who seized power in neighboring Afghanistan in August 2021 as US and NATO troops were in the final stages of their pullout from the country after 20 years of war. 
 


Officer killed, four suspects arrested in raids after deadly Islamabad mosque bombing — police

Updated 07 February 2026
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Officer killed, four suspects arrested in raids after deadly Islamabad mosque bombing — police

  • The blast killed 31 worshippers at a Shiite mosque in Islamabad, with Daesh claiming responsibility for the attack
  • Police arrested four suspected facilitators of the suicide bomber in an overnight raid in Nowshera, an official says

ISLAMABAD: A police officer was killed, while four suspects were arrested in a series of overnight raids conducted by police following a deadly suicide bombing in Islamabad, officials said on Saturday, with Daesh (Islamic States) claiming responsibility for the attack.

Officials said 31 people died in the blast at the Imam Bargah Qasr-e-Khadijatul Kubra mosque in the Tarlai Kallan area on Islamabad’s outskirts on Friday, with scores more being treated for injuries.

The blast occurred at Friday prayers, when mosques around the country are packed with worshippers, with Daesh saying one of its militants had targeted the congregation by detonating an explosive vest.

Late Friday, Pakistani intelligence and law enforcement agencies conducted a raid in the northwestern district of Nowshera, which led to a shootout with suspects linked to Friday’s bombing, leaving one officer dead.

“Assistant Sub-Inspector Ejaz Khattak was martyred, while ASI Aman Sher and Constable Hazrat Ali were injured when police carried out a raid on militants linked to the Islamabad blast,” Nowshera police spokesperson Turk Ali Shah told Arab News, adding more details regarding the arrests would be released by federal authorities.

A senior police official, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the law enforcers had arrested four suspected facilitators of the suicide bomber.

“We have taken four people suspected to be linked to the Islamabad bombing into custody,” the official told Arab News, adding that the arrestees were “being interrogated to ascertain their exact role in the bombing.”

On Friday evening, Tallal Chaudhry, Pakistan’s state minister for interior, blamed the suicide attack on militants “sponsored by India and supported by Afghanistan.”

“He is not an Afghan national, but details of how many times he traveled to Afghanistan have been obtained,” Chaudhry said, declining to reveal the identity of the bomber.

Islamabad has long accused Kabul of allowing its soil to be used by militant groups and New Delhi of backing their cross-border attacks against Pakistani civilians and security forces. The Afghan and Indian governments have consistently denied the allegations.

India also issued a statement on Friday, condemning the attack and condoling the loss of life while calling Islamabad’s accusation against it “as baseless as it is pointless.” The Afghan Taliban government also condemned the attack in a statement issued by its foreign affairs ministry.

Friday’s attack came amid a renewed surge in militant violence in Pakistan and followed a suicide bombing outside a district court complex in Islamabad in November last year that killed at least 12 people and wounded dozens, underscoring growing security concerns even in heavily guarded urban centers.

“Be assured that the previous terrorists and their handlers involved in Islamabad attacks were arrested and are being dealt with according to the law,” Chaudhry told reporters, reassuring that those responsible for the mosque blast would also be arrested.