BREAKING NEWS: Pakistan Armed Group Attacks Church; Hostages Freed


By Xavier P. William, Worthy News Special Correspondent reporting from Rawalpindi, Pakistan

Pakistani security forced standing outside Gordon College Chapel where they freed hostages and detained suspects late Friday, April 2. Photo: Xavier P. William for BosNewsLife and Worthy News

RAWALPINDI, PAKISTAN (Worthy News)– Pakistani security forces freed hostages held in a church compound by over a dozen armed men and women on Friday, April 2, and detained several suspects, police officials and Christians told Worthy News and its partner agency BosNewsLife.

The stand-off at the Gordon College Chapel in the city of Rawalpindi, near the capital Islamabad, began hours earlier when 10 men and eight women wielding automatic rifles and other weapons stormed the compound following a Good Friday worship service there, witnesses said.

“They threw Bibles on the floor and started throwing things around. They also entered the adjacent residential area and started yelling at the women and children at home,” said Shaban Gill, a relative of the attacked residents. 

“They started looting the [compound] at gun point [and] harassed the women and children, taking all their cash and jewelry.” 

Another resident, Imran Nasir, said his wife and their two daughters, ages 18 months and 4-years-old, were taken as hostages by the armed group. 

GUNMEN SHOOT

Amid the ensuing chaos, Gill said several gunmen — some standing “on the walls of the compound” — opened fire at him when he tried to intervene, but he “managed to save” himself, unhurt.

Suspects are rushed to the nearby police station after security forces enter the Gordon College Chapel compound late Friday, April 2. Photo: Xavier P. William for BosNewsLife and Worthy News

It was not immediately clear which group, if any, was behind the attack on the Gordon College Chapel compound,  run by Robinson Community Development Ministries (RCDM),  an evangelical aid, advocacy and mission organization. There motives were unknown Friday, April 2.

Witnesses said the attack was heard by workers at the opposite office of a Pakistani lawmaker, Malik Shakeel Awan, who was not injured in the violence.

They and Christians soon accompanied security forces to the church compound in an attempt to free the hostages unharmed, said local police chief Israr Ahmed Satti.

He said police broke the gate, freed the hostages and detained about 10 suspects. Police did not offer details on whether there had been much resistance from the attackers, but nearly half of the 18 armed persons apparently managed to escape.

Men, dressed in white, could be seen in the police station, apparently awaiting interrogation.

A police list of names seen by BosNewsLife identified the detained suspects as five men, Mushtaq Ahmed, Amjad Zaman Cheema, Dildar Hussain, Muhammad Anwer and Saqib Ali and the women as Nusrat Bibi, Shahnaz Bibi, Sadia Bibi, Irum Bibi and Fatima Bibi.

Police also confiscated automatic weapons along with bullets from the group, added Satti.

POLICE RELUCTANT?

Christians said police had been reluctant to file charges against the suspects, but that they did so after pressure from RCDM Chairman Robinson Asghar and  Christian activists protesting near the police station.

Satti said however that he had ordered “four armed policemen” to guard the church compound, but Christians claimed no security personnel could be seen by early Saturday, local time.

The attack was the latest in a series of violent incidents against Christians in Pakistan’s Punjab province, which have often been carried out by suspected Islamic militants and hardliners, according to rights groups and church organizations.

Christians are estimated to comprise less than five percent of Pakistan’s mainly Muslim population of roughly 175 million people. (With editing by Worthy News’ Stefan J. Bos).

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