Pakistani soldiers participate in an anti-terrorism drill in Pakistan's southern port city of Karachi, on Nov. 29, 2018. Pakistan's armed forces presented an air show and anti-terrorism demonstration in Karachi as part of the 10th edition of the International Defense Exhibition and Seminar (IDEAS-2018). (Xinhua/Stringer)
Gunmen attacked the Pakistan Stock Exchange in Karachi Monday, with four of the assailants killed, police said in a statement.
Karachi police chief Ghulam Nabi Memon said the attackers pulled up in a car outside the trading floor and hurled a grenade at the building before opening fire.
“Four attackers have been killed,” he added.
Karachi was once a hot spot for crime, political and ethnic violence, with heavily armed groups tied to politicians frequently gunning down opponents and launching attacks on residential areas.
However, the situation has largely stabilized in recent years following operations by security agencies against armed political outfits and Islamist militants.
The operations were coupled with a series of large-scale military offensives targeting homegrown insurgents as well as Taliban and Al-Qaeda-linked militants – often based near the lawless border with Afghanistan.
Militant groups however still retain the ability to launch periodic attacks in many rural areas of the country.
Monday’s attack comes more than a week after a grenade was thrown at a line of people waiting outside a government welfare office in the city, which killed one and injured eight others, according to a statement from municipal authorities.
In 2018, separatist militants launched a brazen daylight attack on the Chinese consulate in Karachi that killed four people.
AFP