16 August 2012 Last updated at 10:17 ET   
      Pakistan Shias killed in Gilgit sectarian attack
 
 Pakistan's Shias have accused the government of doing too little to stop attacks against them
As many as 25 Shia Muslims have been   forced out of a bus and killed in a sectarian attack in northern Pakistan,   officials have told the BBC.
The killings took place in a remote and mountainous area about 160km (100   miles) north of the capital Islamabad as the bus was travelling from the city of   Rawalpindi to the city of Gilgit. 
  Sectarian violence has killed hundreds of Pakistanis in recent years. 
Most attacks are in the Northern Areas and in Balochistan province. 
Police told the BBC that those killed in the latest attack were travelling on   three buses for the forthcoming Muslim festival of Eid in the district of   Mansehra. They were either shot or bludgeoned to death.
The victims were checked for their identification documents, police say,   before they were lined up and killed.
Police have moved the bodies to a hospital in Mansehra town, the district   centre. Most victims were between 25 and 30 years of age - there were no women   among them.
"Ten to 12 people wearing army uniform stopped forced some people off the   buses," Mansehra administration chief Khalid Omarzai told the AFP news   agency.
"After checking their papers, they opened fire and at least 20 people are   reported to have been killed. This is initial information and the final toll may   go up. They are all Shias," he said.
   
 Police told AFP that the gunmen were masked.
"They stopped three vehicles, searched them and picked up people in three   batches of five, six and nine and shot them dead. They were all Shias," a police   spokesman said.
Correspondents say that while Shia-majority Gilgit is a popular tourist   destination for wealthy Pakistanis and expatriates, it has suffered from   increased sectarian tensions in recent months. The area neighbours the Swat   valley, a former Taliban stronghold.
Gigit city is the capital of Pakistan's far northern Gilgit-Baltistan region,   and is seen as a gateway to the Karakoram and Himalayan mountain ranges.
Shias and other minority communities say those behind the violence - such as   the banned Sunni militant organisation Lashkar-e-Jhangvi - are rarely caught or   punished.
Sunni extremists allied to or inspired by al-Qaeda and the Taliban routinely   attack government and security targets in northern Pakistan, in addition to   religious minorities and other Muslim sects they consider to be infidels.
In February gunmen killed at least 18 Shia bus passengers in a sectarian   attack in the northern district of Kohistan.
And in September, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi gunmen stopped a bus and killed 26 Shia   pilgrims travelling on a bus in Balochistan province. The attackers were   reported to have checked the identity   cards of all the passengers before removing the Shias and shooting them. 
A predominantly Punjabi group, Lashkar-e-Jhangvi is linked with the 2002   murder of US reporter Daniel Pearl and other militant attacks, particularly in   the southern city of Karachi.
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