A  paramilitary soldier stands guard with a weapon as people walk past on a  street after a firefight between rival gangs in Karachi's Lyari area  June 2, 2010. At least six people were killed and several others injured  during the incident between two rival gangs in the area on Wednesday,  Pakistan's Dawn Newspaper reported.
KARACHI:  A fresh wave of violence blamed on political and ethnic tensions has  killed at least 15 people in Karachi, DawnNews reported, adding that  incidents of firing continued in the city on Tuesday.
Two people were wounded in an incident of firing in the city’s Liaquat National Hospital.
However, AFP quoted officials as saying that at least 12 people were killed in the city overnight.
“At  least 12 people were killed in targeted killings, which started Monday  evening and lasted late in the night,” Sindh’s home ministry spokesman  Sharfuddin Memon told AFP.
Memon said police and paramilitary  troops were stepping up patrols in the troubled western and central  neighbourhoods to avert further violence.
Among the dead was an  MQM activist in Aligarh Bazaar area and local lawyer Zia Alam, a member  of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP).
In 2010, political violence  in Karachi was the deadliest for years, dominated by flare ups in August  after an MQM lawmaker was shot dead and in October on the eve of the  election for his successor.
The Human Rights Commission of  Pakistan says 748 people — 447 political activists and the rest innocent  citizens — were killed in targeted shootings last year. Targeted  killings in 2009 claimed 272 lives.
Karachi is also plagued by ethnic and sectarian killings, crime and kidnappings.





