LAHORE:
Even as a complete blackout of covert areas near the Indian border, where high security measures were being launched to underpin the national defense, residents remained unchanged.
Despite entering under missile fire the night before, the people of these first -line villages remained firm, with steel nerves and uninterrupted spirits, ready to look at the barrel and face the country’s archirrival.
“Four missiles who came from India landed a few hundred feet where I stopped in my fields in the eight minutes in Markaz Taiba, Muridke, a complex that houses universities for children, a university, a hospital, mosque and living compounds,” said lawyer Sheikh Tamoir, a local and farmer leader.
The first missile, he recalled, shook the ground as an earthquake and sent Nangar Sadain to the villagers out of their homes.
Later, three more missiles followed. One crossed the palatial mosque, another Safa Academy success, while the remaining two attacked the homes.
The assault eliminated security arrangements in the Markaz Gates, opening the gates so that nearby residents rush rescue efforts.
Sheikh Tamoir said the local community, by itself, rescued the women of Markaz and changed them to nearby houses for security. He added that instead of applying, the entire area converged in Markaz to show solidarity, since it is a place of great prestige where children receive education and where people from other areas come for subsidized treatment.
He said he was in the advanced years of his life and detest any form of terrorism, and that he had never seen any training in the Markaz, much less in the training of ammunition.
“Hafiz Muhammad Saeed is a burning speaker, and that is,” he said, he added that the entire area could answer for this.
A complete blackout was observed after attack and rescue. However, by Fajr, morality was very high, unwavering spirits and resolve rigid as usual. The mood was so accused that a nearby wind broke out when the agencies of application of the law cordoned off the mosque, prohibit residents to offer morning sentences.
He said that, under the pressure of the locals, the police finally yielded and the residents offered prayers in the destroyed mosque, that their terrain, both literally and in spirit.
Those who lost their lives included the prayer leader of the Mosque, Haji Abdul Malik, who also served in the Markaz as the position of the CCTV cameras.
Every time a robbery occurred in the area, the locals resorted to him to obtain images of the cameras parked around the Markaz to help locate the culprits. The other two martyrs were the caregiver of the mosque, Khadim, and the Muezzin, which calls the faithful to prayer.