Pakistan says Afghan nationals carried out this week’s suicide attacks in the capital and northwest

Pakistan says Afghan nationals carried out this week’s suicide attacks in the capital and northwest
A Pakistani military troop guards outside the damaged entrance after an attack on the Cadet College Wana, a military-linked school, in the South Waziristan district near the Pakistan-Afghanistan border, on Nov. 13, 2025. (AFP)
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Pakistan says Afghan nationals carried out this week’s suicide attacks in the capital and northwest

Pakistan says Afghan nationals carried out this week’s suicide attacks in the capital and northwest
  • “In both of the suicide bombings, Afghan citizens were involved, and they carried out the attacks,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said
  • Pakistan has long accused the Afghan Taliban of harboring TTP leaders and fighters

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s interior minister said Thursday that Afghan nationals carried out two fatal suicide attacks this week — one targeting a cadet college near the Afghan border and the other outside a court in the capital, Islamabad.
“In both of the suicide bombings, Afghan citizens were involved, and they carried out the attacks,” Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said.
There was no immediate comment from Kabul.
On Tuesday a suicide bombing outside a district court in Islamabad killed 12 people and wounded 27 others. Separately on Monday, three soldiers were killed when a suicide bomber and four other militants targeted Cadet College Wana in northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
The attacks underscored Pakistan’s worsening security situation as the government faces growing militancy, tense relations with Kabul and an increasingly fragile truce along the border. Until Tuesday’s attack, the capital had largely been considered safe compared with the country’s conflict-hit northwest.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Wednesday offered talks to Afghanistan’s Taliban government in a renewed peace overture. His call in a televised speech on Wednesday followed the collapse of peace negotiations in Istanbul last week. It raised fears that a ceasefire brokered by Qatar and Turkiye could unravel and trigger new border clashes.
Islamabad wants Kabul to rein in the Pakistani Taliban — known as Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, which has claimed most of the attacks in Pakistan in recent years. The group has distanced itself from the latest attacks, saying it was not behind them.
Pakistan has long accused the Afghan Taliban of harboring TTP leaders and fighters, an allegation Kabul denies. One TTP breakaway faction, Jamaat-ul-Ahrar, initially claimed responsibility for the Islamabad bombing, before one of its commanders retracted the statement.
Pakistan’s Information Minister Attaullah Tarar said Wednesday that all five attackers in the assault on the Cadet College Wana were killed by security forces. More than 600 people — including 525 cadets, their teachers and staff — were safely rescued, he told reporters.
Tarar said the assailants appeared to be attempting a repeat of the 2014 Peshawar school massacre, when a TTP splinter group killed 154 people, mostly children, at an army-run school.
Tensions between Pakistan and Afghanistan have spiked since last month, when Afghanistan accused Islamabad of launching drone strikes on Oct. 9 that killed several people in the Afghan capital. The strikes sparked cross-border clashes that left dozens of soldiers, civilians and militants dead before Qatar brokered a ceasefire on Oct. 19.
Two subsequent rounds of peace talks in Istanbul ended without progress after Kabul refused to provide written assurances that militants would not use Afghan soil for attacks in Pakistan.
The TTP, which is separate from but allied with the Afghan Taliban, has been emboldened since the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan in 2021.


Spain police smash ring smuggling migrant minors to France

Spain police smash ring smuggling migrant minors to France
Updated 10 sec ago

Spain police smash ring smuggling migrant minors to France

Spain police smash ring smuggling migrant minors to France
  • The investigation began after 14 minors went missing from youth care centers
  • An investigation then uncovered a “well-organized network” with logistics in Morocco

MADRID: Spanish police have dismantled a criminal network that trafficked migrant minors from the Canary Islands to France, arresting 11 people, authorities said Thursday.
The investigation began after 14 minors went missing from youth care centers on the islands of Lanzarote and Gran Canaria, Spain’s National Police said in a statement.
In May 2025, officers stopped a Mauritanian man at Lanzarote airport as he attempted to board a flight to Madrid with what appeared to be three minors.
Police arrested the man and one of the alleged minors, who was actually of legal age, after discovering the minors were under the ward of a youth care center on the island.
An investigation then uncovered a “well-organized network” with logistics in Morocco, contacts in the Ivory Coast for falsified documents, and facilities in Spain to temporarily house minors before they were taken to France.
Two homes in Lanzarote were searched, and authorities seized documents, electronic devices and cash.
Nine suspects were arrested in total in Lanzarote, and one each in Madrid and Gran Canaria.
They face charges including document forgery, child abduction, involvement in a criminal organization and child pornography.
Police are still searching for the missing minors.
They face charges including document forgery, child abduction, involvement in a criminal organization and child pornography.
Spain is one of three main entry points for irregular migrants into Europe, alongside Italy and Greece.
The Canary Islands, off northwest Africa, are a key gateway, with nearly 47,000 migrants arriving last year — a record for the second consecutive year — though arrivals are down this year.