AIG Police Hamid Shakeel among 3 martyred in Quetta blast

09 November, 2017 09:27

Additional Inspector General (AIG) Telecommunications Hamid Shakeel and two other police officials were martyred in a suicide attack on Thursday morning in Quetta, according to police officials.

 

Four others have been injured, police and hospital sources said.

The blast targeted senior police official Hamid Shakeel who was leaving his residence and was passing near Chaman Housing Scheme at the time, police said.

Senior Superintendent Police Naseebullah said that the blast was a suicide attack.

The injured have been admitted to Civil Hospital Quetta for treatment, where emergency has been imposed.

Sources told DawnNews that the AIG’s car was badly damaged in the explosion.

The area has been cordoned off and a search operation is underway in the surrounding areas.

Born in 1960, Hamid Shakil has previously served as deputy inspector general operations, acting DIG investigations, and AIG operations, as well as holding a number of other posts throughout his career with the Balochistan police.

Balochistan Governor Muhammad Khan Achakzai and Chief Minister (CM) Sanaullah Zehri strongly condemned the attack.

The government will not bow down before terrorists, the CM said, adding that the culprits behind the attack would be brought to justice.

Balochistan police in the line of fire
Police officers are said to be high-risk targets in Balochistan. After an attack on Quaidabad police superintendent Mubarak Shah Achakzai, a police official told Dawn “We expect more attacks in the near future.”

Explore: Situationer: Balochistan police in the line of fire

Balochistan has been divided into two areas – A and B – based on how their security is organised.

Siddique Baloch, editor of the Balochistan Express, explained to Dawn in July that police are responsible for maintaining law and order in areas that fall under category A.

The category covers 10 per cent of the province’s area, while the remaining province (category B) is under the control of the Balochistan Levies.

“As much as 90 per cent of violent crime occurs in areas covered by police,” Mr Baloch said.

The primary reason he cited is the high level of organisation in police ranks, a fact that seems to incite violence against it by terrorist outfits.

Around 2001, at the onset of the deterioration in Balochistan’s security situation, Baloch separatists would target police constables in Quetta, mainly because most cops hailed from Punjab.

With the passage of time, as the ethnic composition of the police department changed, sectarian and militant outfits began carrying out attacks against cops. In recent years, most targeted attacks against policemen have been claimed by banned Deobandi takfiri terrorist outfits: the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) or the TTP.

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