ISLAMABAD - Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf on Saturday said remaining
hard-line militants in Islamabad-based Lal Masjid, or Red Mosque, should
surrender or die,TV channels reported.
 Radical Muslim students sit after their surrender near Lal
Masjid or Red Mosque in Islamabad July 4, 2007. More than 500 radical
Muslim students surrendered at the besieged mosque in the Pakistani
capital on Wednesday but thousands of militants remained inside a day
after 11 people were killed in clashes. [Xinhua]
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Musharraf made the remarks while
talking to reporters during a visit to Pakistan's flood-hit southwestern
province of Baluchistan.
"They should not prolong, they should surrender and hand over their weapons,
otherwise they risk being killed," he said.
"The government has enough power and no one can stand before its might," he
said. "Our concern is for children and women and we are showing lot of patience
and restraint."
Musharraf said the government has been showing patience in dealing with Lal
Masjid and trying to save lives as many as possible.
Addressing a high-level meeting in Islamabad Saturday, Pakistani Prime
Minister Shaukat Aziz also said the government is concerned over reports that
women and children have been forcibly detained and made hostage by the
"extremists" inside the mosque and seminary complex.
"Their safety is the top priority of the government and we are pursuing a
strategy to achieve our objectives without compromising on their safety", Aziz
said.
The government is avoiding full-fledged military operation against the Lal
Masjid mosque and seminary complex as it does not want massive bloodshed,
according to officials.
Hundreds of male and female students are believed to remain inside the Lal
Masjid or Red Mosque compound, and they have been held as hostages by the mosque
administration and are not allowed to leave, officials said.
The government encouraged interventions by Ulemas, or religious scholars,
parliamentarians, social workers and others for the release of the women and
children held hostage, according to Aziz, who added that their efforts could not
yield positive results and that no headway could be made because of the
intransigence of the administration of Lal Masjid.
A series of blasts and gunfire continued around besieged Lal Masjid Saturday.
Besieged deputy chief of Lal Masjid, Maulana Abdul Rashid Ghaziand a number
of hard-core armed students, who declared that they preferred martyrdom to
surrender, remained defiant inside the mosque.
Officials said a total of 1,221 students, including 795 boys and 426 girls,
have surrendered before law enforcing agencies so far, but could not confirmed
the exact number of students remaining still inside the compound.
Troops surrounded the mosque on July 4, a day after tensions between Lal
Masjid followers and security personnel deployed outside the mosque erupted into
deadly street clashes, which so far have left at least 19 people killed and over
100 injured.