Ten family members killed in Pakistan attack

Policemen cordon off a street in Peshawar, Pakistan, on March 4, 2022. (AFP/File)
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Updated 10 January 2024
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Ten family members killed in Pakistan attack

  • Two brothers, their wives and six children under 12 years killed in northwestern Lakki Marwat 
  • Inter-family feuds are common in Pakistan but in northwestern province, they can be violent 

PESHAWAR: Ten members of the same family, including a two-year-old, were killed in a brutal late-night attack in Pakistan’s northwest, police said Wednesday.

Two brothers, their wives and six children aged 12 and under were killed along with a guest in the Lakki Marwat district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on Tuesday night.

“The initial investigation does not suggest any connection to terrorism,” district police chief Tariq Habib told AFP.

Inter-family feuds are common in Pakistan, but in the northwestern region — where communities abide by traditional honor codes — they can be particularly violent, lasting for generations.

“We cannot dismiss the possibility of a personal vendetta as we further investigate the incident,” police official Mamoor Shah told AFP.

“They were killed with a sharp-edged weapon and some had bullet injuries,” he said.

The incident was reported to police by neighbors of the family.

In March last year in the same province, 11 people including a prominent local politician were killed in an ambush blamed on a decades-long vendetta between families.

Sixteen people were also killed within a matter of minutes in the province last May when two tribes clashed over a decades-long land dispute.


Pakistan court directs authorities to form medical board to assess Imran Khan’s eye condition

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Pakistan court directs authorities to form medical board to assess Imran Khan’s eye condition

  • Islamabad High Court rejects jailed ex-PM’s request for immediate transfer to private hospital
  • Medical board comprising doctors from PIMS and Shifa to submit report on possible transfer

ISLAMABAD: A Pakistani high court on Thursday directed authorities to form a medical board of government doctors to assess whether jailed former prime minister Imran Khan needs to be transferred to a hospital, his party said, following a rejection of his request to be moved to a private facility for treatment.

The development comes after the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) said last week that Khan’s vision had “improved remarkably” since he was given an Anti-VEGF injection amid concerns related to his eyesight.

Anti-VEGF injections are commonly used to treat retinal vein occlusion and other retinal vascular disorders by reducing swelling and abnormal blood vessel growth inside the eye. Prior to the development, the ex-premier had complained of rapid deterioration in vision in one of his eyes.

“The Islamabad High Court has rejected Imran Khan’s request for immediate transfer to Shifa International Hospital,” the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party said in a post on X.

“The court directed that the Chief Commissioner immediately constitute a medical board comprising doctors from PIMS and Shifa Hospital,” it continued. “The medical board will submit a report, on the basis of which the Chief Commissioner will decide whether a hospital transfer is to take place or not.”

The PTI said the court’s decision had raised questions over the judiciary’s independence.

“Delaying a medical emergency and handing it over to administrative discretion is a violation of human rights,” it said. “The issue of Imran Khan’s health is not just about one individual but reflects the entire judicial and state system.”

The 74-year-old cricketer-turned politician has been in prison since August 2023 in cases that he and his party say are politically motivated.

Khan was taken to PIMS for a medical procedure earlier this year, as his party questioned the transparency of the medical update and demanded independent access to his care.

Khan was removed from office in April 2022 through a parliamentary vote of no confidence that he says was orchestrated at the behest of the former administration in Washington by his political rivals with backing from the military. His allegation has been denied by all parties involved.

Since his imprisonment, Khan has faced multiple convictions and ongoing legal proceedings that authorities say follow due process, while his party describes them as efforts to sideline him from politics.