Pakistan sees foreign involvement in Friday’s fatal bombings, pledges to eliminate militant hideouts

A man comforts to another mourning for his relative, who was killed in the bomb explosion, at a hospital, in Quetta, Pakistan, on September 29, 2023. (AP)
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Updated 01 October 2023
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Pakistan sees foreign involvement in Friday’s fatal bombings, pledges to eliminate militant hideouts

  • The interim interior minister names Indian intelligence agency after 65 people lost their lives in Mastung and Hangu attacks
  • Security experts say the country lacks a coherent strategy to deal with militancy, call for ‘holistic policy’ to handle the problem

ISLAMABAD: Caretaker Interior Minister Sarfraz Ahmed Bugti on Saturday vowed to pursue militant groups operating in Pakistan and eliminate their safe havens, as he accused India’s premier spy agency, Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), of orchestrating recent suicide bombings in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces which claimed 65 lives.

Bugti’s statement came just a day after a suicide explosion took place near a gathering to mark the birth anniversary of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) in Balochistan's Mastung area, killing at least 60 people.




People gather at the site of a suicide bomb attack that targeted a procession marking Prophet Muhammad's (PBUH) birthday in Mastung district on September 29, 2023. (AFP)

In another attack that took place later in the day, militants targeted a mosque at a police station in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Hangu district to kill five more people.

No group claimed responsibility for the attacks, though the proscribed Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) network distanced itself from the Friday attacks and denied involvement by issuing a public statement.

“Whether it is Daesh or TTP or anyone else, anyone committing violence under any banner, violence will only be exercised by the state,” the minister told a news conference in Quetta after attending a security meeting.

“All major incidents that occurred in Balochistan were not without RAW’s involvement along with the forces that seek to destabilize Pakistan,” he continued.

Bugti did not provide any evidence of Indian involvement in the recent attacks in Pakistan, though officials in Islamabad have always suspected New Delhi of orchestrating such incidents in the country.

“We will go after the terrorists and eliminate all their dens ... We know who is handling all these terrorists,” he said. “We have decidedly that there will be zero tolerance for these terrorists.”




People being treated in a hospital after getting wounded in an explosion during procession in Mastung town of Pakistan's Balochistan province on Sept. 29, 2023. (Photo courtesy: Edhi Foundation)

Pakistan has witnessed a surge in the militant attacks in the two western provinces located near Afghanistan following the 2021 Taliban return to power in Kabul.

According to the statistics compiled by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies, the first half of the ongoing year saw about 80 percent increase in attacks compared to the corresponding period in 2022.

Security analysts said the country lacked a coherent policy to eradicate the menace of militancy and deal with armed groups like TTP and Daesh.

“The state is facing a difficult situation in dealing with these terrorist outfits, but this is all due to a lack of a coherent and well-defined policy of how to go after them,” Zahid Hussain, a security analyst, told Arab News.

He urged the government to formulate a “holistic policy” to deal with the problem, adding it would otherwise continue to destabilize Pakistan.

“When we see a lull in the terrorist activities, they reorganize themselves and start targeting civilians and security forces again,” he continued.

Ismail Khan, a senior journalist and expert on militancy, said the ongoing struggle against militants was complex since they were operating from their hideouts to target people.

“They are operating from the shadows and it becomes difficult for the security forces to locate and eliminate them all in one go,” he explained, urging the authorities to reinforce intelligence-based operations to eliminate them.

Asked about TTP’s denial of involvement in the attacks, he said that only a thorough investigation into Friday’s bombings would unveil the forces behind the deadly strikes.

“The TTP sometimes deny their involvement in a terrorist attack as part of their strategy to avoid public rebuke,” he added.


Islamabad says Pakistan Saudi Arabia Economic Cooperation Framework initiatives ‘being materialized’

Updated 11 December 2025
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Islamabad says Pakistan Saudi Arabia Economic Cooperation Framework initiatives ‘being materialized’

  • Pakistan, Saudi Arabia agreed to launch framework in October to expand trade, investment ties in priority sectors
  • Pakistan views Saudi Arabia as a vital regional ally that has helped it avert macroeconomic crises over the years

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign office spokesperson said on Thursday that certain initiatives related to the Pakistan Saudi Arabia Economic Cooperation Framework “are being materialized,” describing the economic partnership between the two countries as “solid, firmly rooted.”

Islamabad and Riyadh agreed to launch an Economic Cooperation Framework in October, as per the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), to expand bilateral trade and investment ties. This decision was taken during a meeting between Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman in Riyadh. 

Sharif’s office had said the framework will see the two countries focus on priority sectors including energy, industry, mining, information technology, tourism, agriculture and food security. 

“Pakistan-Saudi economic partnership is solid, firmly rooted,” Tahir Andrabi, the foreign office spokesperson, said during a weekly news briefing. “There were certain initiatives taken during the visit of our prime minister to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and are being materialized.”

Andrabi said Pakistan’s Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) and the Board of Investment are working on “individual investments” between the two countries but did not provide any further details. 

Pakistan’s Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb departed for Riyadh on Wednesday to attend the three-day Global Development Finance Conference, where he is expected to present Islamabad’s perspective on climate adaptation and financing.

“During the conference, Finance Minister Senator Muhammad Aurangzeb will participate in a high-level session on climate adaptation and resilience, where he will join global leaders in discussing how developing countries can secure the capital needed to address climate vulnerabilities,” the Finance Division said in a statement on Wednesday. 

Aurangzeb is also scheduled to hold bilateral meetings with senior Saudi officials, including leadership of the National Development Fund and the Ministry of Finance, to discuss development financing, investment opportunities and broader economic cooperation.

The finance chief will additionally meet Pakistan’s diplomatic mission in Riyadh to review ongoing economic diplomacy initiatives.

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia have long enjoyed close ties but have sought to broaden cooperation in recent months. 

In September, the two countries signed a security agreement pledging that aggression against one would be treated as an attack on both. The move was widely viewed as formalizing longstanding military cooperation into a binding commitment aimed at bolstering joint deterrence.

The Kingdom also hosts more than 2.5 million Pakistani expatriates and serves as the largest source of remittances for Pakistan’s $407 billion economy.