In latest transport tragedy, 22 people killed in bus-car collision in Pakistan

Bystanders stand next to the wreckage of a passenger van and a truck after an accident in Kohat district of northern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province on February 3, 2023. (AFP/File)
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Updated 08 February 2023
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In latest transport tragedy, 22 people killed in bus-car collision in Pakistan

  • Fatal road accidents are common in Pakistan, where traffic rules are rarely followed
  • Bad road infrastructure and use of unfit vehicles are other causes of frequent accidents

PESHAWAR: A speeding bus collided with a car and plunged into a ravine in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday, killing at least 22 passengers and injuring 12 others, police said, the second such deadly accident in less than a week.

The bus was traveling to the garrison city of Rawalpindi from the Ghizer district in the north when the accident happened near Shatial village, 500 kilometers (30 miles) north of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, said Dildar Khan, an area police chief.

He said rescuers transferred the dead and injured to a hospital, where some of them were listed in critical condition.

Last Friday, 17 people were killed in a head-on collision between a passenger bus and a speeding truck near a tunnel in the Kohat district in northwest Pakistan. On Jan, 29, another deadly accident happened in southern Pakistan where a bus crashed into a pillar and fell off a bridge, killing 40 people.

Deadly accidents are common in Pakistan due to poor road infrastructure and a disregard for traffic laws.


Pakistan’s president condemns Kabul blast, accuses Taliban of allowing militant ‘safe havens’

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Pakistan’s president condemns Kabul blast, accuses Taliban of allowing militant ‘safe havens’

  • President Zardari links attack on Chinese-run restaurant to Kabul’s failure to meet Doha commitments
  • He highlights the ‘failure’ of Afghanistan’s Taliban to establish a ‘broad-based and inclusive government’

KARACHI: President Asif Ali Zardari on Monday condemned a blast that ripped through a Chinese-run restaurant in Kabul, killing at least seven people, while criticizing Afghanistan’s Taliban administration for allowing “safe havens” to militant groups to export extremist violence in the region.

The explosion struck the restaurant in Kabul’s Shahr-e-Naw commercial district, an area considered one of the safest in the Afghan capital, killing one Chinese national and six Afghans and wounding several others, including a child, according to Afghan authorities.

The Afghan affiliate of Daesh militant group claimed responsibility, saying the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber.

“The Taliban regime in Afghanistan has failed to honor the commitments made under the Doha Peace Agreement, particularly the obligation to prevent the use of Afghan soil for the export of terrorism,” Zardari said in a statement circulated by his office.

“Pakistan has repeatedly stressed that no terrorist groups should be allowed safe havens in Afghanistan and that regional peace and security must be upheld,” he continued, adding that “it is not just Pakistan but other neighbors of Afghanistan, including Tajikistan, [that] have recently been affected by the terrorists operating out of Afghan soil.”

Pakistan has frequently accused Afghanistan of sheltering proscribed armed factions such as the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and the Balochistan Liberation Army, and of facilitating attacks on Pakistani civilians and security forces, allegations the Taliban deny.

The two countries witnessed major border skirmishes in October last year, followed by talks mediated by Qatar and Türkiye.

Pakistan subsequently closed its border and suspended bilateral and transit trade with Afghanistan, a move that led to a 17% drop in “cross-border attacks,” according to the Center for Research and Security Studies.

Late November also saw a series of deadly incidents along the Tajikistan–Afghanistan border, with militants on the Afghan side firing across the frontier into Tajikistan, killing five Chinese workers employed on Chinese–Tajik mining and construction projects.

In December, Tajik border forces clashed with armed individuals who crossed from Afghanistan, killing several assailants but losing a border guard in the fighting.

Zardari paid tribute to Chinese nationals working in Afghanistan “despite rising insecurity” and expressed solidarity with the victims and their families, while reiterating calls for political reform in Kabul.

“The failure to establish a broad based and inclusive government by the Taliban is contrary to the Doha Agreement,” he said in the statement.