
Another terrorist reportedly went into another classroom which had 60 students in it and blew himself up, killing most of the students. So far, 132 children have been confirmed dead in the massacre.
The insurgents were said to have had inside information before carrying out the well planned attack and there are people who believe the brutal attack was in revenge of Malala winning the Noble Prize while some say the school was attacked because the students aspired to be soldiers. See some harrowing photos from the aftermath of the massacre after the cut...
Shocking eye witness accounts of what happened...culled from UK Daily Mail
At first, 
the children thought it was just a drill. Then the screaming began. As 
the pupils poring over their books realised the bangs they could hear 
were the sounds of guns fired in anger, panic spread.
As Pakistani special forces engaged the attackers, harrowing eyewitness accounts of the massacre emerged from survivors. 
By
 10.15, at least 60 pupils were already dead as hundreds of Pakistani 
soldiers poured from lorries to seal off the area and take the battle to
 the Taliban fighters, all of whom were wearing suicide vests. 
One
 15-year-old student Shahrukh Khan, who was shot in both legs, told how 
he hid under a bench and played dead to avoid being killed by the 
insurgents.
Speaking
 from his bed in the trauma ward of the city's Lady Reading Hospital, 
the teenager told how he even shoved a tie in his mouth to stop him from
 screaming out in fear of the gunmen. 
Khan
 described how, after they burst in shouting 'Allah-o-Akbar' - which 
means 'God is greatest' - one of them shouted: 'There are so many 
children beneath the benches, go and get them'.
He
 said: '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.'
Khan
 told how he tried to get up, but fell because of his injuries. 
Desperate to escape to safety, he crawled into the next room, where he 
the body of the school's office assistant body on fire.
He said: 'She was sitting on the chair with blood dripping from her body as she burned.' 
Khan,
 who said he also saw the body of a soldier who worked at the school, 
then crawled behind a door to hide, where he lost consciousness.
He added: 'One of my teachers was crying, she was shot in the hand and she was crying in pain.
'One
 terrorist then walked up to her and started shooting her until she 
stopped making any sound. All around me my friends were lying injured 
and dead.'
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 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.

















 
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