BBC Online :
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has been behind some of the most violent attacks on Shia Muslims Pakistani police say they have shot dead Malik Ishaq, the leader of banned Sunni
militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Ishaq, who had been detained last week, was in a police convoy in Punjab province when supporters opened fire in an attempt to free him, said police.
They said, Ishaq was killed in a gunfight along with his two sons and 11 militants in Muzaffargarh district.
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) has been behind some of the most violent attacks on Shia Muslims in recent years.
Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada confirmed the news to AFP news agency, while a doctor at Muzaffargarh District Hospital said 14 bodies had been received there.
Six police officers were also reported injured but correspondents say the extent of their injuries is unclear.
Analysis: M Ilyas Khan, BBC News, Islamabad
The circumstances of Ishaq’s killing are not clear, and many believe the gunfight may have been a “fake encounter”, staged to kill a suspect who could be freed if taken to court.
Many believe his death signifies an emerging need in the Pakistani establishment to control sectarian killings.
The death comes as Pakistan is pushing for normalisation in Afghanistan and major Chinese funding for an economic corridor connecting China to the Arabian Sea.
The previous LeJ chief, Riaz Basra, was killed in a similar “encounter” with police in 2002. He was wanted in hundreds of sectarian killings but government prosecutors always failed to bring sufficient evidence to get him convicted in a court.
Ishaq, his two sons and other alleged members of LeJ were taken into custody by the Counter Terrorism Department several days ago in connection with eight recent sectarian killings.
Late on Tuesday they were being led to Shahwala, on the outskirts of Muzaffargarh city, “where they (prisoners) said they had hidden a cache of arms and ammo”, police said.
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has been behind some of the most violent attacks on Shia Muslims Pakistani police say they have shot dead Malik Ishaq, the leader of banned Sunni
militant group Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. Ishaq, who had been detained last week, was in a police convoy in Punjab province when supporters opened fire in an attempt to free him, said police.
They said, Ishaq was killed in a gunfight along with his two sons and 11 militants in Muzaffargarh district.
Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ) has been behind some of the most violent attacks on Shia Muslims in recent years.
Punjab Home Minister Shuja Khanzada confirmed the news to AFP news agency, while a doctor at Muzaffargarh District Hospital said 14 bodies had been received there.
Six police officers were also reported injured but correspondents say the extent of their injuries is unclear.
Analysis: M Ilyas Khan, BBC News, Islamabad
The circumstances of Ishaq’s killing are not clear, and many believe the gunfight may have been a “fake encounter”, staged to kill a suspect who could be freed if taken to court.
Many believe his death signifies an emerging need in the Pakistani establishment to control sectarian killings.
The death comes as Pakistan is pushing for normalisation in Afghanistan and major Chinese funding for an economic corridor connecting China to the Arabian Sea.
The previous LeJ chief, Riaz Basra, was killed in a similar “encounter” with police in 2002. He was wanted in hundreds of sectarian killings but government prosecutors always failed to bring sufficient evidence to get him convicted in a court.
Ishaq, his two sons and other alleged members of LeJ were taken into custody by the Counter Terrorism Department several days ago in connection with eight recent sectarian killings.
Late on Tuesday they were being led to Shahwala, on the outskirts of Muzaffargarh city, “where they (prisoners) said they had hidden a cache of arms and ammo”, police said.