Islamabad, Pakistan – President Gen. Pervez Musharraf’s government said Wednesday that militants accounted for most of the 106 people killed in eight days of fighting around the Red Mosque, calling it a signal that Islamic extremism won’t be tolerated in Pakistan.
Hours later, al-Qaeda’s No. 2 leader released a video to join in the militant outcry against Musharraf, calling on Pakistanis to join in a holy war to avenge the army assault. Ayman al-Zawahri told Pakistanis their president “rubbed your honor in the dirt.”
Authorities said the siege of the mosque compound, which included separate religious schools for girls and boys, resulted in the deaths of 10 soldiers, one police ranger and several civilians killed in the crossfire of the initial street battles that erupted July 3.
Seventy-three bodies – believed to be those of the mosque’s die-hard defenders – were found by Pakistani troops clearing the sprawling complex of mines, booby traps and other weaponry after the final 35-hour fight.
Among the dead was the militants’ leader, pro-Taliban cleric Abdul Rashid Ghazi.
No bodies of women, kids
Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz said commandos searching the mosque found no corpses of women and children, although seven or eight of the bodies had been burned beyond recognition, apparently by the militants’ gasoline bombs.
“The major group of women was all together and came out all together,” he said, referring to 27 women, a 9-year-old boy and two girls, ages 3 and 5, who emerged from the mosque Tuesday.
The extremists had been using the mosque as a base to send out radicalized students to enforce their version of Islamic morality, including abducting alleged prostitutes and trying to “re- educate” them at the compound.
The elite Special Services Group commandos went in after unsuccessful attempts to get the mosque’s militants to surrender. Government forces had surrounded the compound after the deadly street clashes with armed supporters of the mosque July 3.
Shaukat Aziz warned that the government would act against any other madrassa, or religious school, found to be involved in militancy.
“Militancy cannot be promoted, period,” he told reporters. “The law will take its course, as the law took its course here.”
Sites for militants?
Musharraf vowed five years ago to regulate Pakistan’s thousands of religious schools, but concerns have only grown that some are used as sanctuaries or training sites for militants – including Taliban insurgents fighting in Afghanistan.
Students at the mosque’s male and female schools ranged in age from as young as 4 to their early 20s.
The female school also housed some widows and children left homeless by the 2005 earthquake that killed more than 80,000 people in northern Pakistan.
Al-Zawahri’s video was devoted solely to attacking Musharraf over the mosque siege.
“Rigged elections will not save you, politics will not save you, and bargaining, bootlicking negotiations with the criminals and political maneuvers will not save you,” a bespectacled and white-clad al-Zawahri said in the video, which was subtitled in English.
“Musharraf and his hunting dogs have rubbed your honor in the dirt in the service of the Crusaders and the Jews,” he told Pakistanis.



