Two women among 9 killed in Karak firing incidents
KARAK: Nine persons, including two women, were killed in separate incidents in Takht-i-Nusrati tehsil in Karak on Monday.
Police sources said that a man and his two sons opened indiscriminate fire on each other in Jehangeri Banda area of Takht-i-Nusrati tehsil in the limits of Yaqoob Shaheed Police Station. They said the man and his two sons were killed on the spot in the firing. Police said that there was some domestic issue, which led to the fatal incident. In another incident, the mother of slain Rizwanullah informed the police that her son and two grandsons Asifullah and Shaukatullah traded fire that left all the three dead on the spot.
Similarly, one Wali Hassan along with his sons Abid and Naveed, residents of Shagi Lawagher, allegedly opened indiscriminate fire on Abdul Latif, the father-in-law of his daughter Farhad Bibi and mother-in-law Alam Dana inside their home and killed them on the spot.
-
NASA Celebrates One Year Of Trump’s Second Term With Moon And Mars Achievements -
Chris Pratt Shares Real Thoughts On AI In Film Industry -
Netflix Disappointed As Meghan Markle’s Series Struggles To Impress -
Royal Family Announces Death Of Princess: King Releases Statement -
Sarah Ferguson Will Continue To Be Part Of Andrew's Life -
Google’s Gemini Now Offers Free SAT Prep With Full-length Mock Tests -
Everything You Need To Know About Macron’s Viral Glasses: Cost, Model, All Details Revealed -
Elon Musk Warns Of AI ‘supersonic Tsunami’: What It Means For Future -
Why Victoria Beckham's Dance Video From Brooklyn's Wedding Won't Be Released -
Prince Harry No Longer Focused On Healing Royal Family Feud? -
OpenAI Aims To Make AI A Daily Global Tool -
Will Andrew Receive Any Royal Treatment After Title, Royal Lodge Removal? -
How Your Body 'suffers' In Back Pain And Simple Way To Fix It -
What Victoria Beckham Really Did At Brooklyn, Nicola’s Wedding Revealed -
Send Your Name To Moon With Nasa’s Artemis Mission: Here’s How -
Zhipu AI, MiniMax Debuts Mask Structural Hurdles For China’s Tech Giants