WAS PAKISTAN SCHOOL MASSACRE IN REVENGE FOR MALALA'S NOBEL PRIZE? CHILDREN FORCED TO WATCH THEIR TEACHER BEING BURNED ALIVE AS TALIBAN MURDER 132 CHILDREN
A man comforts his son, who was injured during the attack. |
Mourners carry the coffin of a teacher who died during an attack by terrorists in Pershawar, Pakistan. |
A mother looks over her 15-year-old son Mohammed Ali Khan, who was killed by the Taliban gunmen. |
-One terrorist blew himself up in a classroom containing 60 children
-Teacher set on fire in front of pupils, with the children forced to watch
-Insurgents had ‘inside information’ before carrying out well-planned attack
-MailOnline heard harrowing eyewitness accounts of the massacre
-Taliban accepted responsibility for the attack, claiming it 'was just a trailer'
-Expert claims attack could be due to Malala Yousafzai winning Nobel prize
-David Cameron described yesterday's events as a 'dark day for humanity'
-Afghan Taliban criticised 'killing of innocent children' as against principles
-The massacre is the worst ever in the deeply troubled region
A teacher is believed to have been burned alive while her pupils were forced to watch as Taliban gunmen stormed a school in Pakistan in an apparent revenge attack for Malala Yousafzai winning the Nobel Peace Prize.
Seven Taliban terrorists attacked the Army Public School in the north-western Pakistani city of Peshawar yesterday, slaughtering 132 children in the deadliest terrorist attack in the nation's history.
Harrowing eyewitness accounts revealed how students were forced to watch as bodies were burned beyond recognition.
Other survivors told how they played dead while insurgents scoured the school looking for children to shoot, before open fire indiscriminately - sometimes with smiles on their faces.
During a three-hour orgy of bloodshed, seven jihadists claimed at least 141 lives before themselves being killed.
Now one expert has claimed that the horrific events which unfolded yesterday could have been in retaliation to 17-year-old Malala winning this year's Nobel Peace Prize.
The massacre was also said to be an act of revenge against the Pakistani army, which has been attempting to suppress the Pakistani Taliban in their north Waziristan tribal homelands over the past few months.
Source: Daily Mail
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