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Suspects arrested in Sri Lanka team
attack
Wednesday, 04 Mar, 2009 | 11:38 PM PST |
Security officials display
ammunition recovered near and at the site of the shooting attack
on the Sri Lankan cricket team, in Lahore. -Reuters
LAHORE: Police detained several
suspects connected to the attack on Sri Lanka's cricket team in
Pakistan, but said Wednesday they had made no progress in tracking
down the group of gunmen that wounded seven players and killed six
police guarding them.
Reports said the SIM used in the Lahore
attack was registered in the name of a man from Rahim Yar Khan.
The man in question, Shahzad Babar, has been arrested and is being
shifted to an unknown location in Lahore.
Total nine
suspects were arrested in connection with the attack on the Sri
Lankan cricket team, television reports said.
Four suspects
were rounded up from Quetta, three were arrested from Lahore,
whereas two were seized from Karachi, reports said.
Tuesday's attack in Lahore came at a time
of mounting political turmoil in the country and added to fears it
was losing the battle against militants blamed for a series of
high-profile attacks.
Senior police official Haji Habibur
Rehman said police raided locations in Lahore and surrounding
districts and arrested 'some suspects.' He gave no details of
their alleged roles, or the precise number detained, but said some
were picked up at a Lahore hostel, where bloodstained clothes were
also found.
'We are after them, and we hope that
God willing we will soon get a result,' he told a private
television channel.
He confirmed the arrests to The
Associated Press, adding 'so far we have not made any headway
toward the perpetrators.'
Police have a poor record of
investigating terrorist attacks and often round up people in the
immediate aftermath of assaults who are never charged.
Militants are widely suspected to be
behind the attack, but authorities have not explicitly stated
this.
In the commando-style assault, up to 14
heavily armed and well-trained gunmen sprayed the Sri Lankan bus
with bullets and rocket and grenade fire as it traveled to a match
against Pakistan. The bus sped through the ambush and reached the
safety of the stadium.
'Our guys were getting hurt and
screaming, but we couldn't help each other,' Sri Lanka captain
Mahela Jayawardene said when the team arrived home in Colombo
early Wednesday. 'None of us thought that we would come alive out
of the situation.'
Veteran Sri Lanka spinner Muttiah
Muralitharan spoke of the chaos on the bus during the attack.
'All the while bullets were being
sprayed at our bus, people around me were shouting,' he said. 'I
am glad to be back.'
But Jayawardene added that growing up
in Sri Lanka, which has seen scores of terrorist attacks related
to the country's civil war, meant the players had a 'natural
instinct' that made them immediately hit the floor at the first
sound of gunfire.
'We are used to hearing, seeing these
things. Firing, bombings. So we ducked under our seats when the
firing began,' Jayawardene told reporters.
The attack ended Pakistan's hopes of
hosting international cricket teams — or any high profile sports
events — for months, if not years. Even before Tuesday, most
squads chose not to tour the cricket-obsessed country for security
reasons.
The assault bore many similarities to
last year's three-day hostage drama in the Indian financial
capital of Mumbai.
Working in pairs, the attackers carried
walkie-talkies and backpacks stuffed with water, dried fruit and
other high-energy food — a sign they anticipated a protracted
siege and may have been planning to take the players hostage, an
official said.
None of the gunmen was killed, and all
apparently escaped into this teeming city after a 15-minute
gunbattle with the convoy's security detail.
The Punjab government took out
advertisements in newspapers Wednesday offering a $125,000 reward.
The ad showed two alleged attackers,
one dressed in brown and the other blue, and both carrying
backpacks and guns. The image was taken from TV footage of the
event.
Besides the six police officers, a driver
of a vehicle in the convoy was also killed. Seven Sri Lankan
players, a Pakistani umpire and a coach from Britain were wounded,
none with life-threatening injuries.
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