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Karachi Police Avert Possible Attack in Gun Battle

Security officials escort a gunman after a shootout in the southern port city of Karachi, September 11, 2002

By Asif Farooqi, IOL Pakistan correspondent

ISLAMABAD, September 11 (IslamOnline) - Pakistani police averted a possible terror attack in Pakistan against the western targets to mark the first anniversary of September 11, when they arrested five militants, and killed two in a three-hour gun battle in the southern port city of Karachi Wednesday morning, September 11.

Pakistani police said they raided a residential block in a posh Karachi locality where some militants were believed to be hiding. A shootout, according to the provincial police chief Syed Kamal Shah, resulted in “deaths and arrest” of the militants.

Police chief refused to identify the arrested suspects but a senior security official in Karachi told IslamOnline that the deadly encounter “had averted a major terrorist attack in Karachi.”

According to the official, the arrested militants had gathered in the Karachi apartment to execute a major terror attack in Karachi on Wednesday 11 to mark the first anniversary of the attack in the United States.

He gave no details on the possible target of this attack but said two of the arrested terror suspects were Arabs and were linked to Al-Qaeda network of Osama bin Laden.

Police in Karachi was on an unusual land and aerial patrols since early Wednesday morning to head off possible attacks on the first anniversary of the September 11 attacks on the United States which Washington has blamed on al Qaeda.

Security and intelligence agents had raided a three-story building in an upmarket district of Karachi on Wednesday morning and initially arrested two men, but had to call in police support after other people in the building threw a hand grenade at them.

Witnesses said police had fired teargas and thousands of rounds at the building before the gunmen, armed with Kalashnikovs, grenades and submachine guns, finally surrendered.

One of the men shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) as he was led away under arrest, while another was speaking Arabic, witnesses said. The Muslim declaration of faith, was written in blood on the wall of the apartment’s kitchen, a police official claimed.

At least 2,000 policemen have been deployed around diplomatic missions and residences, luxury hotels and offices of foreign companies in Karachi, where three attacks on Western targets in recent months have killed dozens of people.

In the capital Islamabad, diplomats were taking few chances. Both the American and British embassies were closed to the public as a precaution, although officials said they were not aware of any specific threats.

Police said they had recovered three grenades in Islamabad on Tuesday, September 10, that could possibly have been used for attacks on September 11.

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