Karachi - Arab Today
Thousands of Pakistanis on Thursday thronged the streets of Karachi to attend the funeral of one of the country’s best known “Qawwali” musicians, who was gunned down a day earlier in what police called an “act of terror.”
Later, he was laid to rest.
The funeral prayers for Amjad Sabri, which were held on the city’s major Ibn-e-Sina thoroughfare, brought together large numbers of both Sunni and Shiite Muslims, men and women.
He was shot dead by two gunmen riding a motorcycle on Wednesday as he drove his car to a TV studio where he was due to perform for a Ramadan show.
Another male relative, Saleem Sabri, was critically injured in the attack.
Senior police official Muqaddas Haider called the killing an “act of terror” without naming possible suspects.
Dozens of police and paramilitary Rangers on Thursday guarded the funeral procession winding its way down the road, as a sea of mourners surrounded the ambulance carrying Sabri’s body.
Shops and businesses in the Liaquatabad and Nazimbad areas shut down for the day.
Mohammad Farooq Khan, a 36-year-old who contracted polio as a child, said he had walked 12 kilometers from the city’s north on his crutches to attend the funeral.
Another mourner Shaheen Iqbal said she had asked Sabri for help just days earlier.
“He gave me rations for Ramadan and some money. He also promised to help me get a small apartment,” she said, tearfully.
A man claiming to belong to a little known faction of the Pakistani Taliban said his group took responsibility for the attack in a phone call to AFP Wednesday, though it was not possible to verify the claim and a senior official said police were still investigating.
Source: Arab News