Truck driver thought dead in Pakistan roadside attack in Balochistan recovers in hospital

People look at a charred vehicle near a collapsed railway bridge the morning after a blast by separatist militants at Kolpur in Bolan district, Balochistan province on August 27, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 27 August 2024
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Truck driver thought dead in Pakistan roadside attack in Balochistan recovers in hospital

  • Munir Ahmed was driving on a highway when he was targeted by armed men who shot him five times
  • He says his memory of the attack is hazy, but he finds the death of fellow truck drivers upsetting

QUETTA: A Pakistani truck driver, who rescuers initially thought was dead, was recovering on Tuesday after hospital staff receiving bodies realized he was alive despite being shot five times in one of the most widespread attacks in Balochistan by ethnic militants in years.
On Monday, Munir Ahmed was driving with three colleagues in a convoy of four trucks through the southern province of Balochistan.
The drivers did not notice anything amiss and had not heard of any violence until they were about an hour outside of the provincial capital, Quetta.
Suddenly, armed men crowded the dusty stretch of highway, waving at them to stop, ordering the drivers out of their trucks and lining them up on the roadside.
Ahmed, 50, began to recite Islamic verses in fear.
“We were all horrified,” he said.
The gunmen opened fire and threw the men’s bodies into a stream, leaving them for dead.
Meanwhile attackers along other roads were stopping buses, pulling off passengers and killing men in front of their families, the provincial chief minister later said.
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), an armed militant group seeking secession of the resource-rich province bordering Iran and Afghanistan, took responsibility for the assaults.
Authorities said at least 70 people were killed in the attacks and subsequent military operations, including 23 civilians pulled out of their vehicles.
Rescuers put Ahmed and the lifeless bodies of his three colleagues into a vehicle to take to hospital, where medical staff realized he had survived.
A nurse said he had been hit by five bullets in the arm and back but was in stable condition.
Lying flat in a hospital bed, far from home in Punjab with his arm heavily bandaged, Ahmed said his memory of the attack was hazy and he was upset by his colleagues’ deaths, uncertain what would happen next after such a violent disruption to his livelihood.