Daesh claims responsibility for gunning down Sikh in Pakistan

People carry the body of Charanjeet Singh who was a well-known member of the country's minority Sikh community, during his funeral, in Peshawar, Pakistan, Wednesday, May 30, 2018. (Photo courtesy: TRTWorld)
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  • Satnam Singh, 45, was killed by gunmen at his clinic in Peshawar where he sold herbal medicine
  • Pakistani officials deny any organized Daesh presence, though the group has claimed a number of attacks across the country

ISLAMABAD: Daesh has claimed responsibility for killing a member of Pakistan’s minority Sikh community earlier in the week in the northwestern city of Peshawar.
A statement issued by the group late Friday described Satnam Singh, 45, as “polytheist” and said he was shot dead by Daesh members.
Pakistani officials have denied any organized Daesh presence in the country but the extremist group has claimed a number of attacks on security forces, mosques, political rallies and religious minorities in recent years.
Police said Singh was gunned down Thursday in Peshawar, the provincial capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan. The gunmen fled the scene.
Singh, an herbalist, had lived in the city for the past 20 years and ran a small clinic selling herbal medicine.
The assailants opened fire at Singh inside the clinic, according to Sardar Harpal Singh, a local community leader. He denounced the incident and demanded the arrest of those involved in the killing. The two are not related.
The majority of Sikhs migrated from what is now Pakistan to neighboring India in 1947, the year British rule of the subcontinent ended and Pakistan was created as a homeland for Muslims in the region. Thousands of them stayed in Pakistan, where they generally live peacefully. But isolated attacks on religious minorities including Sikhs have continued.