Sun, Dec 22, 2024 | Jumada al-Aakhirah 21, 1446 | DXB ktweather icon0°C

Peshawar school attackers hanged in Kohat prison

Top Stories

'Executions will act as deterrent against future attacks'.

Published: Wed 2 Dec 2015, 11:00 PM

Updated: Thu 3 Dec 2015, 8:51 AM

  • By
  • Afzal Khan

Islamabad: Four militants involved in the Army Public School attack in December last year were hanged on Wednesday in Kohat, Khyber Pakhtunkhawa.
The hanging comes two days after Army chief General Raheel Sharif signed black warrants of Maulvi Abdus Salam, Hazrat Ali, Mujeebur Rehman and Sabeel alias Yahya nearly a year after the horrific massacre.
This was the first such sentence endorsed by the army chief after an order of the Supreme Court on August 2015 which gave legal cover to the establishment of military courts.
The move came after President Mamnoon Hussain rejected clemency appeals of the four convicts on receiving the premier's advice for the same on November 20.
Earlier, a military court sentenced all four terrorists to death after the government lifted the moratorium on the penalties in the country under the National Action Plan.
The four terrorists were linked to the Taleban massacre in which more than 130 schoolchildren were killed, with parents of victims saying the convicts deserved "no forgiveness" as the anniversary of the attack approached.
Survivors of the assault, in which the majority of the more than 150 victims were children, said they were "happy" to hear of the executions, with one father saying the hangings should have been carried out in public squares rather than behind prison doors.
The army on Monday issued a so-called black warrant confirming the executions were imminent. What role they played in the massacre has not been confirmed.
The gunmen who carried out the massacre were all reported killed by security forces during the attack. The attack was Pakistan's deadliest, and shocked and outraged a country already scarred by nearly a decade of extremism.
"The rest should be caught too, no one should be spared," survivor Waheed Anjum, 18, told.
Anjum, who was 17 at the time of the attack, was struck by three bullets, one in each arm and one in his chest.
"They shouldn't have been hanged from prisons, they should have been hanged from squares," his father Momin Khan Khattak added. "There is no forgiveness in our hearts after what they did to our children." Other parents said the executions would act as a deterrent against future extremist attacks.
"The parents of the schoolchildren have long been demanding that the terrorists be severely punished, and today we are satisfied our demands have been met," Ajoon Khan, who lost his only son in the attack, told.
"Had the government hanged all the terrorists before, the Peshawar school attack would never have happened," he said, adding that he hoped others involved in the massacre would meet the same fate.
"The hangings won't bring back my son, but now other people's sons will be kept safer," said father Tufail Ahmed Khan, who lost one son in the attack while another was wounded.
The attack prompted a nation-wide crackdown on extremism, with the establishment of military courts and the resumption of capital punishment after a six-year moratorium. In August, after a trial that took place behind closed doors, the army announced that six militants linked to the assault would be executed, while a seventh was handed a life sentence.
news@khaleejtimes.com
(with input from AFP)



Next Story