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People stand near burnt out vehicles that had been set on fire after unrest broke out as a result of target killing in Karachi, Pakistan on 01 August 2011. Reports state that a recent wave of target killings has sparked fear amongst the residents, almost 17 persons were killed during a couple of days in Karachi. Image Credit: EPA

Karachi: At least 35 people were killed in 24 hours in Karachi, officials said Tuesday, as Pakistan's interior minister described the city as enduring "a reign of terror and bloodshed".

Authorities have struggled to end nightly gunbattles raging across the country's financial capital, with political, ethnic and criminal rivalries leaving more than 200 people dead last month.

Much of the fighting has been blamed on supporters of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), based among the Urdu-speaking majority, and the rival Awami National Party (ANP), which represents ethnic Pashtun migrants.

Hundreds of extra police and paramilitary troops have been deployed on the streets of Karachi, a diverse and congested port city of about 17 million people, but the cycle of civil strife has worsened in recent weeks.

"Our figures show that during the last 24 hours, 35 people have died in the violence, many of whom died in shootings overnight," provincial home department official Sharfuddin Memon told Agencies on Tuesday.

Interior minister Rehman Malik said aerial surveillance would start over the city's most troubled neighbourhoods. "We have ordered surveillance planes to be brought to Karachi for locating and weeding out the killers, who have let loose a reign of terror and bloodshed in the city," Malik said in a statement on Tuesday.