Deadly protests in Pakistan after 8-year-old girl raped, killed
People attend a funeral of a Pakistani girl who was raped and killed, in Kasur, Pakistan, Jan. 10, 2018. (AP Photo)


A mob angered over the recent rape and murder of an 8-year-old girl attacked a police station and a nearby government building in eastern Punjab province on Wednesday, triggering clashes that left at least two people dead and several injured, the police said.

The violence erupted in the city of Kasur hours before the funeral of Zainab Ansari, whose case has drawn wide public outrage.

The girl went missing last week while going to a nearby home for Quranic studies. Her parents, who were away at a pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia at the time, returned on Wednesday, landing at the Islamabad airport.

"We will not bury our daughter until her killers are arrested," said the father, Ameen Ansari, as his wife sobbed.

Police found the body in a trash dump in the city of Kasur in the province of Punjab on Tuesday, a week after she was kidnaped, local police chief Zulfikar Ahmed said Wednesday.

An autopsy suggested the girl was raped before being strangled to death at least five days ago, Ahmed added.

There have been a dozen similar incidents in Kasur in past year in which minor girls were kidnaped, raped and killed, Ahmed added.

"All the cases have resemblances. It looks a lunatic serial killer is behind these incidents," provincial government spokesman Malik Ahmed Ali said, citing an initial inquiry.

Activists on social media have condemned the government for failing to arrest those involved in the crime.

As the attack on the police station and the subsequent clashes unfolded Wednesday, local TVs broadcast footage showing police firing shots in the air and toward the stone-pelting mob, trying to disperse it. In one segment, an officer asks another to hold direct fire, after which the second officer is seen continuing to shoot at the protesters.

Also Wednesday, the Lahore High Court's chief justice ordered a probe into Zainab's killing.

Zulfiqar Hameed, the police chief in Kasur, refused to say whether the two people killed in Wednesday's clashes had died from police gunshots. Provincial Law Minister Rana Sanaullah said the police were trying to contain the violence and find and arrest those involved in the girl's murder.

Kasur shop owners shut their businesses Wednesday to express their anger over Zainab's slaying.