Speaking
at the inauguration ceremony of the Women's University in Kohat, Abbasi
said, “When the APS Peshawar attack took place three years ago, all
political parties and all our armed forces came together to fight
terrorism in the country."
"As a result of this fight,
we have defeated terrorism and today, our schools and mosques our safe,"
he added. "Everyone is free to visit markets and live freely in this
country."
Chief of Army Staff General Qamar Javed Bajwa also shared a message on the third anniversary of the APS attack.
"Remembering
the martyrs of Army Public School Peshawar. The great sacrifice of our
innocent beloved children and their brave families remains
unforgettable. It symbolises our undeterred resolve in the love of our
motherland. Your sacrifice has not gone in vain, we owe this improving
peace to you.”
Tehreek-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP)
militants had stormed the school on Dec 16, 2014, killing at least 144
people ─ most of whom were children.
The deadliest attack
in Pakistan's history had prompted the government to declare an all-out
war against terrorist outfits in the country. In the wake of the
attack, military courts were set up for trying terrorists under
amendments made to the Constitution and the Army Act.
The
mastermind of the APS massacre, Umar Mansour, alias Khalifa Mansour,
alias Umar Naray, was killed in a drone strike in Afghanistan last year.