LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) -- Pakistani police have issued sketches of four of the gunmen who attacked Sri Lanka's cricket team, but no breakthrough had emerged two days after the gunmen fired and then melted away.
The ambush on the team and its police escorts as they drove to the main stadium in Lahore shocked cricket-mad Pakistan and raised new fears about the nuclear-armed U.S. ally's ability to overcome the threat of rising Islamist militancy.
Seven Pakistanis -- six policemen and the driver of a bus carrying match officials -- were killed in the March 3 attack.
Faced with angry finger-pointing over the failure of the police to protect the team, a senior Lahore official said investigators had warned the authorities of just such an attack.
Police handed the media sketches of four of the 12 gunmen.
"The sketches were made from the accounts of a car owner and a rickshaw driver," said city police inspector Asif Rashid.
"They appear to be 25 to 30 years old," he said.
Six Sri Lankan players were wounded along with two team officials, including a British assistant coach. They flew back to Colombo along with the rest of their party later on March 3.
'Caught In A War Zone'
Two Australian umpires and an English referee caught up in the attack slammed the security arrangements and said they were abandoned by Pakistani security forces once the shooting began.
"We were caught in a war zone," umpire Simon Taufel told reporters on his return to Australia. "The gunfire...it just kept going. We thought, when's it going to stop? Who's going to come and save us, how are we going to get out of here? I was expecting a bullet."
ICC match referee Chris Broad told a news conference in Manchester he and other match officials had been left like "sitting ducks" when the attack began.
Pakistan police, desperate for leads, have rounded up scores of people without establishing any link, according to officials, although one investigator told Reuters they had found a cellphone that had led to the arrest of at least one real suspect.
"We've made some arrests, one through a SIM card, but there has been no major catch," city police chief Habib-ur Rehman said late on March 4, referring to a device that holds information in a mobile phone.
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told a news conference with his Sri Lankan counterpart that investigators were following important leads that would eventually unearth the culprits.
Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said it was the first attack on Sri Lankans outside the country and he did not rule out the possibility the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were involved.
Police had warned authorities that the Sri Lankan team was at risk, said Lahore administrator Khusro Pervaiz.
"It's correct that we were forewarned...there were many pieces of information which came to us," he told Dawn Television
Pervaiz did not elaborate but said security for the team could have been "much, much better."
The umpires and players were being driven in a convoy to Lahore's Gaddafi stadium when they came under attack.
The driver of the umpires' bus was among the seven people killed, leaving them stranded in the middle of the crossfire and unable to follow the players' bus to the stadium.
"The driver's foot was lodged on the accelerator and it was revving at a million miles an hour," Steve Davis, another umpire, said. "Eventually a police officer came from somewhere, dragged the driver's body out, and drove us at top speed to the stadium."
The government of Punjab Province, of which Lahore is the capital, has offered a reward of $125,000 for information on the attackers, who were armed with AK-47s, hand grenades, and rocket-propelled grenades.
Television footage showed the gunmen, some of whom appeared to be in their early 20s, wearing track suits and trainers and shalwar kameez, the traditional long shirt and baggy trousers.
Pakistan, beset by economic problems, has reeled under a wave of bomb and gun attacks in recent years, mostly carried out by militants linked to the Taliban or Al-Qaeda.
Commentators have mentioned similarities between the Lahore attack and November's assault on the Indian city of Mumbai in which nearly 170 people were killed. India blamed Pakistani militants and their security agency handlers.
Like many other countries, Australia says its citizens should reconsider the need to travel to Pakistan because of the threat of militant attacks, and it reissued its warning on March 5.
"These attacks could...occur at any time, anywhere in Pakistan," it said.
The ambush on the team and its police escorts as they drove to the main stadium in Lahore shocked cricket-mad Pakistan and raised new fears about the nuclear-armed U.S. ally's ability to overcome the threat of rising Islamist militancy.
Seven Pakistanis -- six policemen and the driver of a bus carrying match officials -- were killed in the March 3 attack.
Faced with angry finger-pointing over the failure of the police to protect the team, a senior Lahore official said investigators had warned the authorities of just such an attack.
Police handed the media sketches of four of the 12 gunmen.
"The sketches were made from the accounts of a car owner and a rickshaw driver," said city police inspector Asif Rashid.
"They appear to be 25 to 30 years old," he said.
Six Sri Lankan players were wounded along with two team officials, including a British assistant coach. They flew back to Colombo along with the rest of their party later on March 3.
'Caught In A War Zone'
Two Australian umpires and an English referee caught up in the attack slammed the security arrangements and said they were abandoned by Pakistani security forces once the shooting began.
"We were caught in a war zone," umpire Simon Taufel told reporters on his return to Australia. "The gunfire...it just kept going. We thought, when's it going to stop? Who's going to come and save us, how are we going to get out of here? I was expecting a bullet."
ICC match referee Chris Broad told a news conference in Manchester he and other match officials had been left like "sitting ducks" when the attack began.
Pakistan police, desperate for leads, have rounded up scores of people without establishing any link, according to officials, although one investigator told Reuters they had found a cellphone that had led to the arrest of at least one real suspect.
"We've made some arrests, one through a SIM card, but there has been no major catch," city police chief Habib-ur Rehman said late on March 4, referring to a device that holds information in a mobile phone.
Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi told a news conference with his Sri Lankan counterpart that investigators were following important leads that would eventually unearth the culprits.
Sri Lankan Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama said it was the first attack on Sri Lankans outside the country and he did not rule out the possibility the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were involved.
Police had warned authorities that the Sri Lankan team was at risk, said Lahore administrator Khusro Pervaiz.
"It's correct that we were forewarned...there were many pieces of information which came to us," he told Dawn Television
Pervaiz did not elaborate but said security for the team could have been "much, much better."
The umpires and players were being driven in a convoy to Lahore's Gaddafi stadium when they came under attack.
The driver of the umpires' bus was among the seven people killed, leaving them stranded in the middle of the crossfire and unable to follow the players' bus to the stadium.
"The driver's foot was lodged on the accelerator and it was revving at a million miles an hour," Steve Davis, another umpire, said. "Eventually a police officer came from somewhere, dragged the driver's body out, and drove us at top speed to the stadium."
The government of Punjab Province, of which Lahore is the capital, has offered a reward of $125,000 for information on the attackers, who were armed with AK-47s, hand grenades, and rocket-propelled grenades.
Television footage showed the gunmen, some of whom appeared to be in their early 20s, wearing track suits and trainers and shalwar kameez, the traditional long shirt and baggy trousers.
Pakistan, beset by economic problems, has reeled under a wave of bomb and gun attacks in recent years, mostly carried out by militants linked to the Taliban or Al-Qaeda.
Commentators have mentioned similarities between the Lahore attack and November's assault on the Indian city of Mumbai in which nearly 170 people were killed. India blamed Pakistani militants and their security agency handlers.
Like many other countries, Australia says its citizens should reconsider the need to travel to Pakistan because of the threat of militant attacks, and it reissued its warning on March 5.
"These attacks could...occur at any time, anywhere in Pakistan," it said.