Two cops injured as militants attack check post in Pakistan’s Mianwali

Police stand guard in Peshawar, Pakistan on February 9, 2024. (AFP/File)
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Updated 03 September 2024
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Two cops injured as militants attack check post in Pakistan’s Mianwali

  • Pakistan has seen a rise in militant attacks in recent weeks by separatist militants and Pakistani Taliban
  • In the latest attack, up to 14 militants attacked Qabool Khel police check post in Punjab’s Mianwali

ISLAMABAD: At least two policemen were injured after more than a dozen militants attacked a check post in the eastern Pakistani town of Mianwali on Monday, with Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi applauding security forces for foiling the assault.

Pakistan has seen a rise in militant attacks in recent weeks, including a series of coordinated attacks in southwestern Balochistan last month in which over 50 people were killed. Separatist militants seeking the resource-rich region’s secession have been targeting government forces and projects being developed as part of the $65-billion China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). 

Elsewhere in the country, particularly the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, religiously motivated groups like the Pakistani Taliban have also stepped up attacks, daily targeting security forces convoys and check posts, and carrying out targeted killings and kidnappings of security and government officials.

In the latest attack, up to 14 militants attacked the Qabool Khel police check post in Punjab’s Mianwali with rockets and hand grenades on Monday.

“Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has commended the police for foiling a terrorist attack on a check post in Mianwali,” state news agency APP reported. “He said that the police gave a befitting response to the terrorists who attacked under the cover of darkness.”

Islamabad blames the latest surge in militancy by the Pakistani Taliban on Kabul and says it has consistently taken up the issue of cross-border attacks with the Taliban administration, which denies allowing Afghan soil to be used for attacks. 

The matter has led to clashes between the border forces of the two countries.


Three Afghan migrants die crossing into Iran as UN warns of new displacement toward Pakistan

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Three Afghan migrants die crossing into Iran as UN warns of new displacement toward Pakistan

  • UNHCR says 1.8 million Afghans were forced to return from Iran this year, straining Afghanistan’s resources
  • Rights groups warn forced refugee returns risk harm as Afghanistan faces food shortages and climate shocks

KABUL: Three Afghans died from exposure in freezing temperatures in the western province of Herat while trying to illegally enter Iran, a local army official said on Saturday.

“Three people who wanted to illegally cross the Iran-Afghanistan border have died because of the cold weather,” the Afghan army official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

He added that a shepherd was also found dead in the mountainous area of Kohsan from the cold.

The migrants were part of a group that attempted to cross into Iran on Wednesday and was stopped by Afghan border forces.

“Searches took place on Wednesday night, but the bodies were only found on Thursday,” the army official said.

More than 1.8 million Afghans were forced to return to Afghanistan by the Iranian authorities between January and the end of November 2025, according to the latest figures from the United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR), which said that the majority were “forced and coerced returns.”

“These mass returns in adverse circumstances have strained Afghanistan’s already overstretched resources and services” which leads to “risks of onward and new displacement, including return movements back into Pakistan and Iran and onward,” UNHCR posted on its site dedicated to Afghanistan’s situation.

This week, Amnesty International called on countries to stop forcibly returning people to Afghanistan, citing a “real risk of serious harm for returnees.”

Hit by two major earthquakes in recent months and highly vulnerable to climate change, Afghanistan faces multiple challenges.

It is subject to international sanctions particularly due to the exclusion of women from many jobs and public places, described by the UN as “gender apartheid.”

More than 17 million people in the country are facing acute food insecurity, the UN World Food Program said Tuesday.