After the 2014 Peshawar massacre, most Pakistanis believed their state had effectively cracked down on militants. But the latest attacks show the government's anti-terror policy has been a failure, say analysts.
A group of gunmen stormed the Bacha Khan University in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, January 20, killing over 20 people, including students and faculty members. The university, located in the Khyber Pukhtonkhwa province, is named after a local political leader known for his preachings on non-violence.
At the time of the attack, the students and faculty gathered for a poetry recital to commemorate Bacha Khan's death anniversary. A leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Khalifa Umar Mansoor, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying that it was revenge for the militants killed by Pakistani security forces in recent months.
Experts say the latest assault shows the Taliban are still capable of inflicting terror in Pakistan, despite the government's efforts to eliminate terrorism.
Mehmood Jan, a Peshawar-based journalist working for Geo News, says the military consolidated power and went after the militants following the Peshawar school massacre in December 2014, in which over 150 people - mostly children - were killed. Shortly after, the military launched a full-blown assault on militant strongholds in the tribal areas."But the latest attack shows that although the military's operation succeeded in splintering the Taliban, the terrorists still retain the strength, capacity and resources to attack," Jan told DW.
A group of gunmen stormed the Bacha Khan University in northwestern Pakistan on Wednesday, January 20, killing over 20 people, including students and faculty members. The university, located in the Khyber Pukhtonkhwa province, is named after a local political leader known for his preachings on non-violence.
At the time of the attack, the students and faculty gathered for a poetry recital to commemorate Bacha Khan's death anniversary. A leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Khalifa Umar Mansoor, claimed responsibility for the attack, saying that it was revenge for the militants killed by Pakistani security forces in recent months.
Experts say the latest assault shows the Taliban are still capable of inflicting terror in Pakistan, despite the government's efforts to eliminate terrorism.
Mehmood Jan, a Peshawar-based journalist working for Geo News, says the military consolidated power and went after the militants following the Peshawar school massacre in December 2014, in which over 150 people - mostly children - were killed. Shortly after, the military launched a full-blown assault on militant strongholds in the tribal areas."But the latest attack shows that although the military's operation succeeded in splintering the Taliban, the terrorists still retain the strength, capacity and resources to attack," Jan told DW.
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