Pakistani authorities are demolishing the battle-scarred madrasa or religious school in Islamabad's Red Mosque complex, where scores of students and other civilians were killed in an army assault this month.
Officials said on Wednesday they decided to raze the four-storeyed structure as it has been badly weakened in the fighting.
"We are demolishing the madrasa because technically it is very dangerous to sustain it," Kamran Lashari, head of the city municipality, said.
"The demolition is going on and it will be completed in three to four days," he said.
However, he said the government had no plans to demolish the mosque, and it was being renovated to be reopened for prayers on Friday.
Pakistani army commandoes stormed the complex and adjoining Jamia Hafsa seminary for women on July 10 after those running anti-government movement from the complex refused to surrender.
The government said 102 people were killed in eight days of fighting when security forces stormed the complex.
After the assault, President Pervez Musharraf, an important ally of the United States in its "war on terror", vowed not to allow mosques or madrasas to be misused.
PHOTO CAPTION
Bulldozers tear down an Islamic seminary or Jamia Hafsa adjacent to Islamabad's Red Mosque in Islamabad, Pakistan Wednesday, July 25, 2007. (AP)