Pakistan reopens siege mosque 3 months after raid

Wed Oct 3, 2007 12:15pm BST
 
Email | Print | | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistani authorities opened a mosque in the capital, Islamabad, on Wednesday nearly three months after more than 100 people were killed when commandos stormed the compound to end a siege by Islamist gunmen.

Hundreds of people turned up to offer prayers at the newly painted and repaired Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, which was re-opened on the orders of the Supreme Court.

An earlier attempt to re-open the mosque sparked violent clashes between Islamists and police and a suicide bomber killed 13 people near the mosque on the same day.

But there was no trouble on Wednesday as police removed barbed wire and security posts from around the mosque.

"We don't need any security, it was not us but the policemen here who created the problem," said Shah Abdul Aziz, an opposition member of parliament from an Islamist party.

More than 100 people were killed during a week-long siege and army assault on the mosque and religious school complex in July after violence broke out between gunmen based at the mosque and security forces outside.

Among those killed in the July 10 assault was Abdul Rashid Ghazi, a radical cleric who led the mosque's Taliban-style movement with his brother, Abdul Aziz.

Aziz was captured during the siege when he tried to slip out of the mosque and past security forces clad in a woman's burqa.

A nephew of the brothers, Amir Siddique, has been made a deputy cleric at the mosque.  Continued...

 
Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling speaks at a Thomson Reuters newsmaker event in London October 21, 2009. REUTERS/Andrew Winning
Darling says stimulus stays

G20 policymakers are agreed that it is too early to pull the plug on economic life-support packages, Chancellor Alistair Darling tells Reuters.  Full Article 

Most Popular General News on Reuters UK

  • Articles
  • Videos
 A demonstrator pounds away the Berlin Wall as East Berlin border guards look on from above the Brandenburg Gate in this November 11, 1989 file photo. REUTERS/David Brauchli/File Photo
Berlin Wall anniversary

Twenty years after the Berlin Wall's fall, Reuters provides an in-depth, multimedia look at one of the 20th Century's defining moments.   Full Coverage