A violent brawl between two student groups at Karachi University left seven students injured on Tuesday, triggering a campus-wide lockdown and raising fresh alarms over security on the premises.
The fighting broke out near the Arts and Social Sciences department during the afternoon rush. Witnesses reported that members of two rival student organizations began trading blows before the situation escalated into a full-scale clash involving sticks and stones.
By the time university security and local police arrived, the area had been cleared of the primary agitators. The seven injured were rushed to nearby hospitals; doctors described their conditions as stable, though several suffered head injuries from blunt force trauma.
“It started with a minor argument over a small issue, but within minutes, a dozen more people arrived and the situation turned ugly,” said a student who witnessed the start of the fight. He declined to be named for fear of retaliation.
The university administration suspended academic activities in the affected department immediately following the incident. Heavily armed police contingents were seen patrolling the main gates and internal roads well into the evening, a stark contrast to the usual atmosphere on campus.
While the university has historically struggled with student group tensions, this latest flare-up highlights a persistent failure to maintain order. Senior university officials have yet to issue a formal statement regarding disciplinary action or the specific trigger for the violence.
The campus remains on high alert, with security personnel screening everyone entering the main entrance. For now, the students caught in the middle of the dispute are left waiting for a return to classes, while the administration faces mounting pressure to permanently address the cycle of violence that frequently disrupts the academic calendar.
