Two policemen killed, three injured in militant attacks in northwest Pakistan

Pakistani policemen secure a damaged police checkpost after an attack in Mardan on June 16, 2009. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 18 August 2024
Follow

Two policemen killed, three injured in militant attacks in northwest Pakistan

  • The attacks took place in Lakki Marwat, Bajaur districts of the volatile Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province
  • Islamabad has blamed fresh surge in attacks on militants operating out of Afghanistan, Kabul denies it

PESHAWAR: Two policemen were killed and three others sustained injuries in two separate attacks by militants in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province on Sunday, police said.

The northwestern Pakistani province, which borders Afghanistan, has been the scene of a number of attacks on police, security forces, and anti-polio vaccination teams in recent weeks.

In the first attack, a police mobile van of Bragai police station came under attack by militants during a routine patrol in the Lakki Marwat district, according to district police spokesman Shahid Marwat.

“Armed terrorists opened indiscriminate fire on the police mobile van near Sayed Azam Petrol Pump, leaving police officer Nisar Ahmad dead,” Marwat told Arab News.

“Three policemen, including Station House Officer (SHO) Shakir Khan, were wounded who were in stable condition at a district’s medical facility.”

The second attack took place in the Bajaur tribal district, in which a traffic police officer was critically injured when unidentified gunmen riding a motorbike opened fire on him, police said.

“The traffic police officer succumbed to his wounds on way to hospital,” Jaffar Shah, a police officer in Bajaur, told Arab News.

While no group immediately claimed responsibility for the attacks, suspicion is likely to fall on the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), who have claimed a number of attacks in KP in recent months.

Pakistan initially witnessed a spike in militant violence in its two western provinces, KP and Balochistan, since the Pakistani Taliban called off their fragile truce with the government in November 2022. The group has intensified its attacks recently.

Islamabad blames the latest surge in violence on neighboring Afghanistan, saying Pakistani Taliban leaders have taken refuge there and run camps to train insurgents to launch attacks inside Pakistan. The Afghan Taliban rulers in Kabul say rising violence in Pakistan is a domestic issue for Islamabad and it does not allow militants to operate on its territory.

The latest deaths have brought the total number of police killings in ambushes and targeted attacks in the volatile province this year to 68, according to police.

On Friday, Pakistani security forces killed three militants and injured one during an intelligence-based operation in KP’s North Waziristan district, according to the military’s media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR).

Pakistani forces were able to effectively dismantle the TTP and kill most of its top leadership in a string of military operations from 2014 onwards in KP’s tribal areas, driving most of the fighters into neighboring Afghanistan, where Islamabad says they have regrouped. Kabul denies this.


Pakistan president to visit Bahrain on Jan.13-16 to hold trade, defense talks

Updated 12 January 2026
Follow

Pakistan president to visit Bahrain on Jan.13-16 to hold trade, defense talks

  • Asif Ali Zardari will meet King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa and Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad
  • Both nations have been seeking to deepen ties following a bilateral investment summit in May 2025

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari will visit Bahrain on Jan. 13-16 where he would meet King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa and Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al-Khalifa, the Pakistani foreign office said on Monday, adding the talks would encompass trade and defense cooperation.

Pakistan and Bahrain have maintained close diplomatic, trade, investment and defense relations and have lately been focusing on strengthening their cooperation in key economic sectors.

The Pakistan president’s visit will be focused on bilateral, regional and international issues of mutual interest for both nations, according to the foreign office in Islamabad.

“The visit seeks to reinforce Pakistan’s longstanding cooperation with the brotherly Gulf nation while expanding opportunities for collaboration in trade and economic partnership, defense and security, and people-to-people ties,” the Pakistani foreign office said.

The development comes amid increasing economic engagement between the two countries, following the Pakistan-Bahrain Investment Summit in May last year. Both sides signed contracts worth $13 million at the summit.

Bahrain is also home to a significant Pakistani expatriate community, a major source of remittances to the South Asian country and often highlighted by officials as a key pillar of bilateral relations.