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Monday, 5 August, 2002, 13:12 GMT 14:12 UK
Gunmen attack Pakistan school


The school says its guards saved the children's lives

At least six people have been killed in a gun attack on a missionary school
for foreign students in Pakistan.


They wanted to hit at the missionary community. What better way than to hit
at their kids?
Police say four gunmen fought their way into the Murree Christian School
complex in the hills near the capital, Islamabad, at about 1115 (0515 GMT),
firing indiscriminately.

Four people were wounded in the ensuing gunbattle with security guards. No
pupils were among those killed, all of whom were Pakistani guards and
employees, the school says.

Correspondents say that because the school has mainly foreign staff and
students, the attack appears aimed at Western interests, rather than
Pakistan's Christian minority.


Previous attacks on foreign interests in Pakistan have been blamed on Islamic
militants angry at Islamabad's support for the US-led war on terror.

Witnesses say the security guards, two of whom died, averted a bloodbath by
stopping the gunmen from entering a classroom full of children.

The gunmen escaped into nearby woods and dozens of heavily armed soldiers
have been searching for them with the help of sniffer dogs and helicopters.

The school has praised the guards' bravery.

Its website says "all students and expatriate staff are safe and being cared
for".

'Disaster'

About 150 children, almost all of them foreigners, study at Murree, which is
about 70 kilometres (40 miles) north-east of Islamabad.

The school's Australian principal, Russell Morton, said two security guards,
a cook and a carpenter were among the dead.





Pakistan attacks:

14 June - bomb outside US Karachi mission kills 11

8 May - Karachi bus blast kills 15

17 March - five killed in Islamabad church grenade blast

October 2001 - 18 killed in Punjab church attack

Pakistan's Islamic militants




They are believed to include Christians and Muslims.

"This is a disaster for the foreign missionary community," he told Reuters
news agency.

"It is my opinion that this attack was designed to cause trouble for the
Pakistan authorities."

The attack is the third on a Christian target in Pakistan since President
Pervez Musharraf joined the US-led campaign against al-Qaeda and the Taleban
last autumn.

A grenade attack on a Protestant church in Islamabad's diplomatic area in
March killed five people, including the wife and daughter of a US diplomat.

Last October, masked gunmen shot dead at least 18 worshippers at a church in
the eastern town of Bahawalpur in Punjab Province.

Militants blamed


All pupils are safe, the school says

Police say no arrests have been made in the Murree attack, and no group has
said it carried it out.

But BBC correspondent Zaffar Abbas in Islamabad says police suspect Islamic
militants are to blame.

Islamic groups are also accused of carrying out two bomb attacks on foreign
targets in the southern city of Karachi since March, which killed 26 people.

The authorities believe most of these attacks have been carried out either by
members of al-Qaeda or their supporters in Pakistan, our correspondent says.

The BBC's Frances Harrison
"Security had been increased"


The BBC's Zaffar Abbas
"It's really a miracle that the children and staff were not really hurt"


Russell Morton, Murree Christian School
"Masked men came through the front gate"


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