"Four terrorists including the chief of banned LeJ were killed by the Counter-Terrorism Department in an encounter last night near Sheikhupura, about 40-km northwest of Lahore," a CTD spokesperson was quoted as saying by the Geo TV.
The killing of Asif Chotu alias Rizwan alias Nasir came 18 months after police executed his predecessor and the then LeJ Ameer Malik Ishaq in an encounter in July 2015.
On the tip off, the CTD team blockaded the Railway Phatak Sheikhupura last night and ordered terrorists to surrender.
The terrorists, however, assumed positions and started firing indiscriminately on the police party chasing them. The police responded and found four terrorists dead while three terrorists succeeded in fleeing from the scene.
Two of the other slain terrorists were identified as Dr. Shakirullah alias Ali Sufyan and Noor-ul-Amin, while one dead terrorist is yet to be identified.
Investigation has been launched for arrest of the fleeing terrorists, the spokesperson added.
Asif had joined banned Sipah-e-Sahaba in the 1990s. He was later appointed commander of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi in Karachi and after the death of Ishaq, he was appointed LeJ Ameer.
He was directly involved in killing over 100 citizens of Pakistan in Punjab, Sindh, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan. Indirectly, he was involved in killing of over 200 people.
Asif along with four of his accomplices had killed two Iranian engineers, who were working on Clifton Bridge, in 1998. He also murdered Managing Director PSO Shoukat Raza in Clifton and shot dead the then chairman PIA and son of former army general Musa Khan.
Shakir alias Ali Sufyan was LeJ Ameer of KP and had killed more than 50 people in the KP and Punjab.
Noor-ul-Amin belonged to KP. He had killed more than 20 people including Police Inspector Raja Saqlain of Rawalpindi. He was carrying a bounty of Rs 1,000,000 on his head.
LeJ was founded in 1996 as a militant offshoot of Sipah-i-Sahaba, a Sunni sectarian group that emerged in the mid-1980s. LeJ has claimed responsibility for the deaths of hundreds of civilians, mostly minority Shia Muslims.
In March 2009, a bus carrying the Sri Lankan cricket team was attacked by the Taliban and LeJ militants in Lahore. Seven Lankan players had sustained injuries while six policemen were killed in the attack.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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