A teenage survivor who was shot in both legs during
today's Taliban attack on a Pakistani school has described how he shoved
a tie in his mouth to stop him from screaming in fear as gunmen hunted
for children to kill.
Shahrukh Khan, 16, was sitting with his classmates during a
careers guidance session at the Army Public School in Peshawar when
gunmen wearing paramilitary uniforms burst in and opened fire.
The schoolboy described how he cowered under a bench and played dead
while gunmen 'pumped bullets' in fellow students' bodies. Fearing he
was about to be killed, the young boy then managed to crawl to shelter
behind a door in a nearby classroom, despite sustaining gunshot wounds
to both his legs.
Today's attack in the north-western Pakistani city of Peshawar today
left at least 132 children and is believed to be the bloodiest ever
attacks in the nation's history.
Speaking from his bed in the trauma ward of the Lady Reading Hospital,
Shahrukh described how the gunmen shouted 'Allah-o-Akbar' before opening
fire. He said: 'Someone screamed at us to get down and hide below the
desks. Then one of them shouted: "There are so many children beneath the
benches, go and get them."
'I saw a pair of big black boots coming towards me, this guy was
probably hunting for students hiding beneath the benches.' Khan said he
felt searing pain as he was shot in both his legs just below the knee.
He decided to play dead, adding: 'I folded my tie and pushed it into my
mouth so that I wouldn't scream.
The man with big boots kept on looking for students and pumping bullets
into their bodies. 'I lay as still as I could and closed my eyes,
waiting to get shot again. My body was shivering. 'I saw death so close
and I will never forget the black boots approaching me—I felt as though
it was death that was approaching me.' The attack started with nine
gunmen entering the 500-pupil school - which has students aged 10 to 18 -
in the early hours.
The jihadists shot their way into the building and went from classroom
to classroom, shooting at random and picking off students one by one.
Eye-witnesses described how students cowered under desks as dead bodies
were strewn along corridors. News images of the aftermath of the
attack showed boys in blood-soaked school uniforms with green blazers
being carried from the scene.
Taliban later accepted responsibility for the attack, claiming it 'was
just a trailer'. As his father, a shopkeeper, comforted him in his
blood-soaked bed, the young boy recalled: 'The men left after some time
and I stayed there for a few minutes.
'Then I tried to get up but fell to the ground because of my wounds.
When I crawled to the next room, it was horrible. I saw the dead body of
our office assistant on fire. 'She was sitting on the chair with blood
dripping from her body as she burned.'
It was not immediately clear how the woman's body caught fire, though
local media has reported that some of the Taliban militants set her
alight because she was trying to protect her students. Khan, who said
he also saw the body of a soldier who worked at the school, crawled
behind a door to hide and then lost consciousness, later waking up in
hospital.
A 10-year-old boy caught up in the massacre also spoke of his dramatic
escape from Taliban gunmen as bullets whizzed past his head - having
seen two of his classmates shot dead in front of him. Irfan Shah told
how he was sitting in his class at 10:30 when he heard the sound of
firing outside. Shah told MailOnline:
'It was our social studies period. Our teacher first told us that some
kind of drill was going on and that we do not need to worry. It was very
intense firing. Then the sound came closer. Then we heard cries. One of
our friends open the window of the class.
'He started weeping as there were several school fellows lying on the
ground outside the class. 'Everybody was in panic. Two of our class
fellows ran outside class in panic. They were shot in front of us.'
He said that the teacher asked the children, part of a class of 33, to run towards the back gate of the school.
He continued: 'The back gate is around 200 meters from our class room. I
tightly held the hand of my friend Daniyal and we both ran towards the
back gate. We were weeping. I felt bullets passing by my head twice. It
was so terrible.
'We reached back gate in a minute. As we stepped outside the gate, we
started weeping again very loudly. An aunt from a nearby house heard us
and took us inside her house. We were shivering. She gave us water and
comforted us. We stayed there for 15 minutes.
'Our van always parked a few hundred meters away from the school. We
then went to our van. The van driver told us that our school fellows who
have been murdered in the attack are martyrs and they would go to
jannah (paradise). 'We have been told that two of our class fellows
died in the attack. They both were shot in front of all of us.'
The jihadists shot their way into the building and went from classroom
to classroom, shooting at random and picking off students one by one.
Eye-witnesses described how students cowered under desks as dead bodies were strewn along corridors.
News images of the aftermath of the attack showed boys in blood-soaked
school uniforms with green blazers being carried from the scene.
Taliban later accepted responsibility for the attack, claiming it 'was just a trailer'.
As his father, a shopkeeper, comforted him in his blood-soaked bed, the
young boy recalled: 'The men left after some time and I stayed there for
a few minutes.
'Then I tried to get up but fell to the ground because of my wounds.
When I crawled to the next room, it was horrible. I saw the dead body of
our office assistant on fire.
'She was sitting on the chair with blood dripping from her body as she burned.'
It was not immediately clear how the woman's body caught fire, though
local media has reported that some of the Taliban militants set her
alight because she was trying to protect her students.
Khan, who said he also saw the body of a soldier who worked at the
school, crawled behind a door to hide and then lost consciousness, later
waking up in hospital.
A 10-year-old boy caught up in the massacre also spoke of his dramatic
escape from Taliban gunmen as bullets whizzed past his head - having
seen two of his classmates shot dead in front of him.
Irfan Shah told how he was sitting in his class at 10:30 when he heard the sound of firing outside.
Shah told MailOnline: 'It was our social studies period. Our teacher
first told us that some kind of drill was going on and that we do not
need to worry. It was very intense firing. Then the sound came closer.
Then we heard cries. One of our friends open the window of the class.
'He started weeping as there were several school fellows lying on the ground outside the class.
'Everybody was in panic. Two of our class fellows ran outside class in panic. They were shot in front of us.'
He said that the teacher asked the children, part of a class of 33, to run towards the back gate of the school.
He continued: 'The back gate is around 200 meters from our class room. I
tightly held the hand of my friend Daniyal and we both ran towards the
back gate. We were weeping. I felt bullets passing by my head twice. It
was so terrible.
'We reached back gate in a minute. As we stepped outside the gate, we
started weeping again very loudly. An aunt from a nearby house heard us
and took us inside her house. We were shivering. She gave us water and
comforted us. We stayed there for 15 minutes.
'Our van always parked a few hundred meters away from the school. We
then went to our van. The van driver told us that our school fellows who
have been murdered in the attack are martyrs and they would go to
jannah (paradise).
'We have been told that two of our class fellows died in the attack. They both were shot in front of all of us.'
- See more at: http://gist-arena.blogspot.ae/2014/12/heartbreaking-story-teenage-survivor.html#sthash.CLbimieH.dpuf
Amir Sohail Khan, 19, told MailOnline how he was at his college a few
kilometres away from the school when he heard about the attack. He
said: 'I heard about it around 11 at my college. Then my uncle gave me a
call and asked me to reach the school to check the whereabouts of my
young cousins. One is seven and other is nine.
It took me more than 45 minutes to reach the spot as army closed down
all the roads and streets leading to school.' He said that went to the
main gate of the school around 12:30.
He continued: 'I saw a few soldiers trying to encircle a young man who
was wearing a similar uniform to them. When soldiers tried to approach
him, there was a huge blast. The other guy was one of the terrorists.
This was such a horrible scene.
'For a few moments, I couldn't understand what was going on. I saw his
body parts flying in the air after the blast. One of the soldiers was
badly injured.' Khan also saw terrorists firing indiscriminately in the
class rooms on the second floor of the building.
He said: 'It is a huge double story building. I saw a terrorist getting
into a classroom and firing like anything. Then I heard the cries and
most of those crying became silent after a few minutes which means
either they died or fainted.'
A soldier told him that the kids who had successfully managed to get out of school were in a nearby park.
He added: 'I went there but couldn't find my cousins among those kids. A
soldier on told me that they might have died in the attack. I could not
even imagine that.
'After, a few minutes I saw the elder one coming towards the park. I was never so happy and relieved to see him.
He was weeping and shivering with fear. I held him to my chest. It was
great feeling. 'Five minutes after him, my younger cousin also
appeared. I lost my senses in happiness after seeing him. Our family is
blessed. I saw mothers and fathers crying like mad at the gate of the
school. I do not believe that we are so blessed.'
Mohammad Muneeb told how his 14-year-old brother Muhammad Shaheer was
shot dead in front of him as 200 children sat in an auditorium, getting
training in first aid.
'Two guards were there, sitting on the desk at the front, when four
people wearing black uniform ran in. They just started firing. First
they targeted the brigadier and his guards, the two guards were
killed. 'The brigadier managed to get away safely and they started
firing at the students. 'I saw my own brother die, he was shot in the
throat.'
A school volunteer who did not want to be named described the
auditorium shooting: 'I was working with the other organisations. What I
saw was indescribable. I was in the auditorium when they burst in, it
was 1030 when they broke in to the school. There was a function in the
auditorium, they just opened fire on everyone. They just started firing
and shooting violently with AK47s.
'There was around 200 children in the auditorium, all boys.' Father
Muhammad Dahir, a computer engineer, said: 'I am so sad, I cannot
explain my feelings. I cannot speak. There are dead bodies everywhere.
This city is filled with dead bodies. I cannot explain my feelings. What
kind of horror are we involved in? We are in the frontline here.
Everyone is pushing us, the Americans, our own government.'
Pharmacist Ahmed Salman, whose 15-year-old son was killed, said: 'I took
my son to school this morning and I was at work when someone told me
there was firing in the school. I went there and saw children being
taken out in ambulances. I was searching but I could not find him. 'My
younger brother called me and told me that Ahmed's body was lying in the
mortuary of the military hospital. He had a bullet in his lungs.'
Mudassar Abbas, a physics laboratory assistant at the school, said some
students were celebrating at a party when the attack began. 'I saw six
or seven people walking class-to-class and opening fire on children,' he
said. Mudassir Awan, an employee at the school, said he saw at least
six people scaling the walls of the building, but initially thought
little of it.
'We thought it must be the children playing some game. But then we saw a
lot of firearms with them,' he said. 'As soon as the firing started,
we ran to our classrooms. They were entering every class and they were
killing the children,' he added. One of the wounded students, Abdullah
Jamal, said he was with a group of 8th, 9th and 10th graders who were
getting first-aid instructions and training with a team of Pakistani
army medics when the attack began.
When the shooting started, Mr Jamal, who was shot in the leg, said
nobody knew what was going on in the first few seconds. 'Then I saw
children falling down who were crying and screaming. I also fell down. I
learned later that I have got a bullet,' he said, speaking from his
hospital bed. 'All the children had bullet wounds. All the children
were bleeding,' he added. Akhtar Ali, who works out for the UN, was
weeping outside the school.
He told MailOnline: 'My 14-year-old niece Afaq is inside the school. I
don't know if she is alive or dead. I am desperate. I am just waiting in
hope. It is agony. '
'My son was in uniform in the morning. He is in a casket now,' wailed
one parent, Tahir Ali, as he came to the hospital to collect the body of
his 14-year-old son, Abdullah.
'My son was my dream. My dream has been killed.' MailOnline spoke to
Naveed Ahmed, who works at the irrigation department. He said: 'My son
Hasid Asmad is 16-years-old, is still inside the school.,
He took a mobile and called me while I was in the mosque, he was
praying down the phone. I have been waiting so many hours for news. My
son told that he was being kept safe by the Pakistan army inside. They
are taking a picture of them to prove they are safe.
'They have told me that the children are safe in the custody of the
army.' Mrs Humayun Khan, one of the mothers of a student, said with
tears in her eyes:
'No body is telling me about my son's whereabouts... I have checked the
hospital and he is not there. I am really losing my heart. God forbid
may he's not among the students still under custody of terrorists.'
A student who survived the attack said soldiers came to rescue students
during a lull in the firing. 'When we were coming out of the class we
saw dead bodies of our friends lying in the corridors. They were
bleeding. Some were shot three times, some four times,' the student
said.
'The men entered the rooms one by one and started indiscriminate firing
at the staff and students.' Zakir Ahmad, who runs an electronics store
in Peshawar, has lost his 16-year-old Abdullah and is frantically
searching for 12-year-old Hassnain, who is still missing hours after the
atrocity.
Crying and barely able to speak, he told MailOnline: 'When I heard
there was an attack I ran to the school. I heard firing. I sent my
cousins and staff to search the hospitals while I stayed praying at
school.
Then after an hour I got the call, he just said Abdullah is dead. I
have found him in the hospital. I still don't know anything about my boy
Hasnain.
'This is a terrible injustice. We are innocent people, by boys are
innocents who do not carry guns and bombs. The only justice for me is to
find these people who are supporting extremists and hang them in rows.
Make them die for what they did.
'My son was such a good boy. Obedient, bright. When he was going to school this morning he came into my room and kissed me.'