PESHAWAR,  Pakistan (AP) — Several dozen militants armed with assault rifles and  rocket-propelled grenades attacked a power grid station in northwestern Pakistan  before dawn Tuesday, killing seven people and taking four hostage, police said.
The  attack on the outskirts of Peshawar city occurred at around 2 a.m., said the local  police chief in the area, Granullah Khan. The militants first killed two people  at the scene of the attack and took nine with them, he said.
The  militants then killed five of the hostages as they were fleeing and were  pursued by police, said the police chief. The bodies were found about a  kilometer (half a mile) away from the grid station. Four of the abducted were  still missing.
The  dead included three policemen and four government power workers, said Khan. The  men still missing are all power workers.
The  grid that was attacked is located near Khyber, part of Pakistan's  semiautonomous tribal region bordering Afghanistan, the main sanctuary for the  Taliban in the country. It supplies electricity to a large part of Peshawar,  and many areas of the city were still without power on Tuesday morning because  the station was damaged in the attack.
No  group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack. But Taliban militants  waging a bloody insurgency against the government have staged scores of attacks  against security officials, government personnel and civilians.
The  Pakistani military has launched dozens of operations against the Taliban in the  tribal region, but the militants continue to carry out frequent attacks. The  group has also made recent gains in an area of Khyber called the Tirah Valley,  which potentially provides them easier access to Peshawar.
There  are concerns the militants could step up attacks in the run-up to parliamentary  elections on May 11 in an attempt to derail the vote.
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