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Rediff.com  » News » Year after Peshawar attack: 'Everyone is still traumatised inside the school'

Year after Peshawar attack: 'Everyone is still traumatised inside the school'

Source: ANI
Last updated on: December 16, 2015 14:23 IST
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Relatives holding pictures of their loved ones killed in a Taliban assault on an army school in Peshawar paraded in the city as Pakistan on Wednesday marked the first anniversary of the deadliest terror attack in the country amid tight security.

A relative carries a framed photograph of a student, who was killed during the December 15, 2014 attack by Pakistan's Taliban gunmen on Army Public School. Photograph: Khuram Parvez / Reuters

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, army chief Raheel Sharif and several top notch leaders and security officials attended a ceremony in Peshawar to remember the victims.

At least 150 people, including 136 students, were killed when gunmen in uniforms of security personnel stormed the army-run school on December 16, 2014.

Security was on high alert in the country on the first anniversary of the massacre. The educational institutes were closed and security personnel deployed at key places.

Relatives of the attack victims participated in a parade holding pictures of their loved ones.

Rallies and demonstrations were held in other parts of the country to pay tribute to the victims.

The attack shocked the country scarred by nearly a decade of insurgency. Students and parents complain of ongoing trauma for which many are still receiving psychological help.

"Everyone is traumatised inside the school," said Mehran Khan, a 14-year-old student at the school said. "We are all thinking that there will be another attack."

Kazim Hussain, a nutritionist and businessman whose son was shot twice but survived, can still experience the horror of searching for his son in the 30 to 35 beds that were randomly strewn across the emergency ward of a hospital on that fateful day.

"I wish no-one ever has to face a scene like that," he told the BBC.

Students and members of civil society hold placards while shouting slogans during a rally in Lahore, Pakistan, in memory of the victims of last year's Taliban attack on the Army Public School in Peshawar. Photograph: Mohsin Raza/ Reuters

Waheed Anjum, 18, was shot three times during the attack -- once in each arm and once in the chest.

"I can't move my arms properly. I can't lift weights," he said.

Relatives of the victims will be given medals by the army leadership. Survivors of the massacre will also be awarded medals for their bravery.

The attack prompted the government to take several measures, including lifting a moratorium on the death penalty.

Pakistan earlier this month hanged four men linked to the Peshawar attack.

After the attack, all schools were ordered to rapidly build walls and extra defences. The authorities at the Peshawar army school carried out massive renovations in an attempt to remove the memory of the attack.

The army also decided to intensify the Zarb-e-Azb operation which was launched in June, 2014, to wipe out militancy.

Last week, the army said that 3,400 militants have been killed in the ongoing operation.

But critics have voiced concerns over a failure to tackle the long-term causes of the violence.

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Source: ANI
 
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