ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
Officials in northwestern Pakistan reported on Saturday that a government delegation has begun efforts to negotiate a ceasefire between rival Sunni and Shiite Muslim tribes following armed clashes that resulted in nearly 80 deaths this week.
The sectarian conflict in
Kurram district, which borders Afghanistan, flared up Thursday when heavily
armed men from the Sunni tribe ambushed multiple passenger vehicles and killed
at least 45 Shi'ites, including men, women, and children.
On Friday, Shi'ite community
members conducted revenge attacks against the Sunni-dominated village where the
ambush had taken place, killing at least 33 people and wounding dozens of
others. The attackers set petrol stations on fire and damaged markets as well
as homes.
A spokesman for the Khyber
Pakhtunkhwa province, where Kurram is located, announced Saturday that a
high-powered government delegation had flown into the turbulent district
center, Parachinar, and met with Shi'ite community leaders there.
Muhammad Ali Saif said in a
late-night video statement that the meetings were "positive" and
efforts were being made to "resolve all disputes amicably to end the
tension." He added that the delegation plans to talk with Sunni community
leaders in the next stage.
"Our top priority is to
broker a cease-fire and establish a lasting peace in the district," said
Saif, also part of the government delegation.
The Pakistani border district
is known for deadly Shi'ite-Sunni sectarian violence, which stems from
long-running land disputes.
A land dispute sparked weeks
of clashes in Kurram earlier this year, killing more than 100 people between
August and October this year. The fighting had compelled provincial authorities
to halt all traffic to and from the district until earlier this month when
tribal elders brokered a temporary cease-fire between the opposing factions.
This week's clashes have once
again halted traffic on the sole road connecting the district — which has a
population of approximately 800,000 — to the provincial capital of Peshawar.
The violence in Kurram comes
amid a marked increase in militant attacks against Pakistani security forces in
multiple districts near or along the Afghan border.
Officials say the violence
this month in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and southwestern Balochistan province, which
borders Afghanistan, has resulted in the deaths of dozens of security
personnel, including troops.
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