Four killed, 10 injured as two suicide bombers strike in northwest Pakistan

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Security personnel inspect the site of a bomb blast in Bara province at Khyber Pakhtunkhwa district of Peshawar on July 20, 2023. (AFP)
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People stand near a damages police compound after a suicide bombing attack in the Bara district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, on July 20, 2023. (AP)
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A man stands inside a damages police compound after a suicide bomber attack in the Bara Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, on July 20, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 20 July 2023
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Four killed, 10 injured as two suicide bombers strike in northwest Pakistan

  • Attack took place in Bara neighborhood of Khyber district, which borders Afghanistan
  • One suicide bomber blew himself up, vest of other bomber detonated after police shot him

PESHAWAR: At least four people were killed and 10 were injured in the northwestern Pakistani district of Khyber on Thursday after two suicide bombers attacked a compound that housed a police station and several government offices, the police said.

The attack took place in the Bara neighborhood of Khyber district, which borders Afghanistan. Police said one of the suicide bombers blew himself up while the suicide vest of the other bomber detonated after the police shot him.

Thursday’s attack came hours after militants of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, or the Pakistani Taliban shot and killed two police officers and wounded two others in an overnight gun attack at a roadside checkpoint in the northwestern city of Peshawar, the capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. 

“Two suicide blasts have occurred at the gate of a compound where government offices and the Bara Police station are located,” a spokesperson for Khyber Police, Zaheer Khan, told Arab News, adding that the area had been cordoned off and a search operation was ongoing.




A man stands inside a damages police compound after a suicide bomber attack in the Bara Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, onJuly 20, 2023. (AP)

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement.

Bilal Faizi, the spokesperson for Rescue 1122 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, told Arab News four people were killed in the attack.

District Khyber was a part of the erstwhile Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) but was later merged with Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 2018. It was for long a stronghold of TTP militants who have carried out some of the deadliest attacks against Pakistan’s security forces.

Militancy in the district declined following the Pakistan Army’s operations there, but with the return of the Afghan Taliban to power in neighbouring Afghanistan in 2021, the South Asian country has seen an uptick in violence in border areas, particularly after a fragile truce between the TTP and the state broke down in November last year.

On Tuesday, eight people were injured when militants targeted the vehicle of the paramilitary Frontier Corps (FC) in Peshawar.


Pakistan launches privatization process for five power distributors under IMF reforms

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Pakistan launches privatization process for five power distributors under IMF reforms

  • Power-sector losses have pushed circular debt above $9 billion, official documents show
  • Move is tied to IMF and World Bank conditions aimed at cutting subsidies and fiscal risk

KARACHI: Pakistan has appointed financial advisers and launched sell-side due diligence for the privatization of five electricity distribution companies, marking a long-awaited step in power-sector reforms tied to International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank programs, according to official documents shared with media on Monday.

The five companies, namely Islamabad Electric Supply Company (IESCO), Faisalabad Electric Supply Company (FESCO), Gujranwala Electric Power Company (GEPCO), Hyderabad Electric Supply Company (HESCO) and Sukkur Electric Power Company (SEPCO), supply electricity to tens of millions of customers and have long been a major source of financial losses for the state.

Pakistan’s power sector has accumulated more than Rs2.6 trillion (about $9.3 billion) in circular debt as of mid-2025, driven largely by distribution losses, electricity theft and weak bill recovery, according to official government data cited in the documents. The shortfall has repeatedly forced the government to provide subsidies, adding pressure to public finances in an economy under IMF supervision.

“The objective is to reduce losses, improve efficiency and limit the government’s fiscal exposure by transferring electricity distribution operations to the private sector,” the documents said, adding that sell-side due diligence for five distribution companies is under way as a prerequisite for investor engagement.

Two utilities, the Quetta Electric Supply Company and Tribal Areas Electric Supply Company, are excluded from the current privatization phase due to security and structural constraints, the documents said.

Power-sector reform is a central pillar of Pakistan’s IMF bailout program, under which Islamabad has committed to restructuring state-owned enterprises, improving governance and reducing budgetary support. The World Bank has also linked future energy-sector financing to progress on structural reforms.

Electricity distribution companies in Pakistan routinely report losses exceeding 20 percent of supplied power, far above international benchmarks, according to official figures. These inefficiencies have been a persistent obstacle to economic growth, investment and reliable power supply.

Previous attempts to privatize power distributors have stalled amid political resistance, labor union opposition and concerns over tariff increases. While officials have not announced a timeline for completing transactions, the launch of due diligence marks the most concrete step taken in years. International lenders and investors will now be closely watching whether Pakistan can translate this phase into completed sales, a key test of its ability to deliver on IMF-backed reforms.

In a related development in Pakistan’s privatization agenda, the government last month concluded the long-delayed sale of a 75 percent stake in national flag carrier Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) in a publicly televised auction. A consortium led by the Arif Habib Group emerged as the highest bidder with a Rs135 billion ($482 million) offer for the controlling stake, in a transaction officials have said will end decades of state-funded bailouts and inject fresh capital into the loss-making airline.