Gunmen kill 14 including navy officials on bus in Pakistan

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Gunmen disguised as Pakistani security officials killed 14 passengers early morning on Thursday after forcing them off buses on the Makran Coastal Highway in Balochistan province. (EPA photo)
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In this file photo a soldier stands guard in Quetta, Pakistan May 24, 2017. (REUTERS/file)
Updated 18 April 2019
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Gunmen kill 14 including navy officials on bus in Pakistan

  • Suspected separatists took aside 16 travellers with Punjab domicile addresses on their identity cards, two escaped
  • Assault is the second major attack in Balochistan province in less than a week

KARACHI: Gunmen disguised as Pakistani security officials killed at least 14 passengers, including personnel of the navy, early morning on Thursday after forcing them off buses traveling between the financial hub of Karachi and the coastal town of Gwadar, the government and the navy said.

The assault in southwestern Baluchistan comes less than a week after a suicide bomb ripped through an outdoor market in the province, killing at least 20 people, half of them from the ethnic Hazaras Shia minority.
“Fourteen people have been martyred by terrorists near Buzi Top on the [Makran] Coastal Highway,” a spokesperson for the Pakistan Navy told Arab News. “The martyrs also include personnel of the Pakistan Navy.”
Thursday’s attack is one in a long line of such attacks in Balochistan, many of them carried out by Taliban and sectarian militants against minorities, and some by Baloch separatists against what are termed “settlers” from other parts of Pakistan, particularly Punjab, the country’s most populous and richest province.
Local tv channels and social media posts said Baloch Raji Aajoi Sangar (BRAS), an umbrella group formed by three separatist groups, the Balochistan Liberation Front, the Balochistan Liberation Army and Baloch Republican Guards, had claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement.
“Those who were targeted carried [identification] cards of the Pakistan Navy and Coast Guards, and they were only killed after they were identified,” local media quoted the BRAS statement as saying.
Prime Minister Imran Khan condemned Thursday’s attack in a statement released by his office and “directed the authorities to make every possible effort to identify and to bring the perpetrators of the barbaric act to justice.”
Balochistan’s Information Minister Zahoor Ahmed Buledi told Arab News around 50 gunmen wearing uniforms of the paramilitary Frontier Corps stopped at least three buses in the Buzi Top area on the Makran coastal highway.
“They [terrorists] offloaded the passengers and took aside sixteen passengers with addresses of Punjab province on their national identity cards,” Buledi said. “They gunned down fourteen whereas two managed to escape.”
The bodies of all fourteen people killed have been shifted to a navy hospital in Ormara, the minister said, adding that the identities of the deceased were yet to be confirmed.
“Heartless terrorists have crossed all limits of barbarity by killing innocent passengers,” Balochistan chief minister Jam Kamal Khan said in a statement. “The terrorists will be brought to the book.”


Pakistan, UK discuss regional security, cross-border attacks as senior official visits Islamabad

Updated 20 January 2026
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Pakistan, UK discuss regional security, cross-border attacks as senior official visits Islamabad

  • British envoy for Afghanistan Richard Lindsay’s visit comes at a time of a surge in militancy in Pakistan’s border regions
  • Pakistani diplomat says both sides reviewed broader security challenges, emphasized coordination to address ‘shared concerns’

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani and British officials have discussed regional security challenges and cross-border attacks during talks in Islamabad, a Pakistani diplomat said on Tuesday, during a visit of the United Kingdom’s Afghanistan envoy, Richard Lindsay, to the Pakistani capital.

Pakistan and the UK regularly cooperate on counterterrorism and security, with a focus on intelligence-sharing to combat militant activity. Lindsay’s visit comes at a time of a rise in militancy in Pakistan’s western provinces, which border Afghanistan.

Mohammad Sadiq, Pakistan’s special representative for Afghanistan, said the discussions in Islamabad focused on the regional security situation, particularly the urgent challenge posed by cross-border attacks.

“We also exchanged views on the latest regional security developments and broader security challenges,” he said on X. “We emphasized the importance of continued cooperation and coordination to address shared concerns and promote regional stability.”

Islamabad frequently accuses Afghanistan of allowing its soil and India of backing militant groups, such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), for attacks against Pakistan. Kabul and New Delhi deny this.

In recent years, Pakistan and the UK have engaged with each other on counterterrorism and cross-border crimes as part of bilateral cooperation.

Both sides held the second round of the Pakistan-UK Counter Terrorism Dialogue in London in February last year, reviewing global and regional threats and exchanging best practices. Over the years, armed forces of both countries have also maintained close cooperation, particularly in counterterrorism efforts and professional military training.