A group of militants stormed a university in volatile north-western Pakistan on Wednesday, police said, with firing inside the campus still going on and at least two explosions heard.
Two of the gunmen were killed by security forces after the army moved into the university, Deputy Inspector General Saeed Wazir told Reuters, but other attackers were believed to be at large on the second and third floors of the campus buildings.
Three security guards, one university lecturer and one student were critically wounded but there were no confirmed deaths, Wazir said. He said 70 percent of students had been rescued.
Television channels quoted rescue officials as saying that a chemistry professor had been killed and 50 people wounded in the attack.
The militants, using the cover of thick, wintry fog, scaled the walls of the Bacha Khan University in Charsadda, in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, before entering buildings and opening fire on students and teachers in classrooms and hostels, police said.
Wazir said all the students had been evacuated from the hostels, but militants were still hiding in different parts of the university and some students and staff were trapped inside.
He said it was unclear how many gunmen were involved.
The Pakistani military’s media wing said the army had cordoned off the university with the militants inside and were carrying out air surveillance.
Television footage showed soldiers entering the campus as ambulances lined up outside the main gate and anxious parents consoled each other.
Pakistan, which has suffered from years of militant violence, has killed and arrested hundreds of suspected militants under a major crackdown launched after a massacre of 134 school children in December 2014 in the northwest.
Vice Chancellor Fazal Rahim told reporters that the Bacha Khan University teaches over 3,000 students and hosted an additional 600 visitors on Wednesday for a poetry recital. (Reuters)