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Four killed as rivals clash in Karachi

Four people were killed in clashes between rival factions in Pakistan's Karachi city on Tuesday but police said they were hopeful violence was easing off after days of bloodshed in which dozens of people have been killed.

  • Reuters
  • Published: 23:25 December 2, 2008
  • Gulf News

Karachi: Four people were killed in clashes between rival factions in Pakistan's Karachi city on Tuesday but police said they were hopeful violence was easing off after days of bloodshed in which dozens of people have been killed.

Karachi is Pakistan's biggest city and commercial hub and has a long history of political, ethnic and religious violence.

The latest clashes between ethnic-based factions have raised fears of a return to the chronic bloodshed that plagued the city in the 1990s.

The clashes broke out on Saturday between members of the city's majority community of Urdu-speakers, most of them descendents of migrants from India at the time of the partition of the India in 1947, and ethnic Pashtuns from northwest Pakistan.

City police chief Waseem Ahmad said four people were killed in different incidents in the early hours of yesterday but the city had been mostly calm since then.

"There has been no major incident since the morning," Ahmad told Reuters.

At least 40 people have been killed since Saturday, according to a tally of reports from police and hospitals.

Rivals fought gun battles and burned shops and cars in several parts of the city of 15 million people over the weekend and more disturbances erupted on Monday.

Police have been told to shoot trouble-makers on sight and have banned pillion riding on motor bikes.

Some commentators in Pakistan have raised the possibility of Indian instigation of the violence in Karachi as a response to last week's militant assault in Mumbai.

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