QUETTA: Pakistani security forces killed five militants in an intelligence-based operation in southwestern Balochistan this week, the military said on Wednesday, as a spate of attacks underscored continued instability in the country’s largest and most resource-rich province.
The overnight raid in Khuzdar district on Sept. 14–15 came two days after an explosion killed five security personnel in neighboring Kech.
“During the conduct of operation, own forces effectively engaged the terrorists’ location and after an intense fire exchange, five Indian sponsored terrorists were sent to hell,” the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said in a statement.
Pakistan frequently blames neighboring India and Afghanistan for sponsoring militant groups on its soil, accusations both New Delhi and Kabul have consistently denied.
“Weapons, ammunition and explosives were also recovered from the terrorists, who remained actively involved in numerous terrorist activities in the area,” the military added, saying a sanitization operation was under way to eliminate remaining fighters.
In a separate incident late Tuesday, militants killed a police officer and injured two Levies paramilitary personnel in a coordinated assault on a security post in Sherani, officials said.
“Levies and police personnel retaliated, engaging the militants in a fierce gunbattle,” Deputy Commissioner Hazrat Wali Kakar told Arab News.
“One police official, Aftab Ur Rehman, was killed in the attack and two Levies personnel, Kalu Khan and Abdul Wahid, were injured.”
He said one Levies officer was still missing as of Wednesday, with a search operation under way. The attackers also torched a Levies vehicle and destroyed Provincial Disaster Management Authority (PDMA) stocks stored at the compound.
Also on Tuesday, unidentified gunmen intercepted two armored vehicles transporting over Rs220 million ($770,000) for private banks from Turbat to Gwadar, senior Levies officer Ilahi Bukhsh said.
The assailants disarmed six security guards before fleeing with the cash. No group has claimed responsibility.
Balochistan, which borders Iran and Afghanistan, has for years faced a low-level insurgency by separatist groups demanding greater autonomy and control over local resources. The militants regularly attack security forces, infrastructure and foreign projects, deterring badly needed investment.
On Saturday, the army said 19 Pakistani soldiers were killed in two separate clashes with Pakistani Taliban fighters in the country’s northwest, where militants have ramped up attacks on security forces.
Islamabad alleges that the Pakistani Taliban is being harbored by the Afghan Taliban administration with the support of India, a source of tension with Kabul and New Delhi, which both deny the charge. The group is inspired by the Afghan Taliban.
The Pakistani group has stepped up attacks, targeting Pakistani security forces since the Afghan Taliban swept to power in 2021.