Pakistan police kill top bandit who used TikTok to terrorize, transfix Punjab’s riverine marshlands

This screengrab, taken on November 9, 2024, shows a person watching a video of Bandit Shahid Lund Baloch on TikTok. (Screengrab via YouTube/File)
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Updated 09 November 2024
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Pakistan police kill top bandit who used TikTok to terrorize, transfix Punjab’s riverine marshlands

  • Shahid Lund among bandits using Internet to parade hostages, exhibited arsenals of weapons in musical TikToks
  • High-standing crops in Katcha lands along Indus River provide cover for ambushes, kidnappings, highway robberies, smuggling

KARACHI: Pakistani police said on Friday they had killed a top bandit who was famous for his videos on TikTok and had operated for years in the notorious riverine marshlands of the Punjab province.
Shahid Lund had been hiding out in the riverine terrain in Punjab which has long offered refuge to bandits. The 28-year-old used the Internet to enthrall citizens even as he preyed on them, according to police.
On TikTok, Facebook, YouTube and Instagram, he fascinated tens of thousands with messages delivered with a gun in hand, romanticizing his rural lifestyle and cultivating a reputation as a champion of the people.
The Punjab police said on Friday Lund, who led the Lund gang, one of several groups of bandits in Pakistan’s riverine area, had been killed in a joint operation by the Rahim Yar Khan and Rajanpur district police.
“The Government of Punjab had placed a bounty of Rs10 million ($35,811) on Shahid Lund,” the Punjab police said in a statement on X. “The deceased bandit was wanted by the police in 28 cases, including killing of policemen, terrorism, kidnapping for ransom, attacks on police, murders and robberies.”
Lund was said to dwell on a sandy island in the riverlands, often called the ‘katcha’ area that roughly translates to ‘backwaters,’ on the Indus River which skewers Pakistan from top to bottom. High-standing crops provide cover for ambushes and the region is riven by shifting seasonal waterways that complicate pursuit over crimes ranging from kidnapping to highway robbery and smuggling.
At the intersection of three of Pakistan’s four provinces, gangs with hundreds of members have for decades capitalized on poor coordination between police forces by flitting across jurisdictions. Sweeping police operations and even an army incursion in 2016 failed to impose law and order. This August, a rocket attack on a police convoy killed 12 officers.
Some bandits use the web to lay “honey-traps” luring kidnap victims by impersonating romantic suitors, business partners and advertising cheap sales of tractors or cars, while others parade hostages in clips for ransom or exhibit arsenals of heavy weapons in musical TikToks. Lund had by far the largest online profile — irking police with a combined 200,000 followers.
The Punjab police chief, Dr. Usman Anwar, lauded the Rahim Yar Khan and Rajanpur police for the successful operation in the riverlands.
“It is the mission of the police to eliminate terrorists, dacoits and miscreants from the katcha area,” Anwar was quoted as saying by the provincial police.


Pakistan casts uncertainty over T20 World Cup participation after Bangladesh row

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Pakistan casts uncertainty over T20 World Cup participation after Bangladesh row

  • Pakistan Cricket Board chief criticizes ICC’s ‘double standards’ for replacing Bangladesh with Scotland in T20 World Cup
  • PCB boss Mohsin Naqvi says board will take final decision on World Cup participation after Pakistan PM returns from UK

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Mohsin Naqvi this week threw the national cricket team’s participation in the upcoming T20 World Cup 2026 into doubt by saying he would seek the government’s directives on it, after the International Cricket Council (ICC) replaced Bangladesh in the tournament. 

Naqvi was speaking to reporters in Lahore on Saturday shortly after the ICC announced it had replaced Bangladesh with Scotland in the T20 World Cup. The decision stemmed from Bangladesh’s refusal to play in India owing to security fears. Bangladesh had requested a venue outside India for their World Cup matches. 

The demand was made owing to fresh tensions between Bangladesh and India’s cricket boards. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) told Indian Premier League franchise Kolkata Knight Riders earlier this month to drop Bangladesh’s cricketer Mustafizur Rahman due to political tensions between Dhaka and New Delhi. 

Naqvi criticized the ICC for its “double standards” when it came to Bangladesh, pointing out that India and Pakistan were allowed to play against each other at neutral venues as per an earlier deal between both cricket boards and the ICC. He said Bangladesh should be allowed to play in the World Cup. 

“If the government of Pakistan says we mustn’t play, then maybe the ICC will bring in a 22nd team (after Scotland),” Naqvi told reporters. “But this decision has to be taken by the government of Pakistan.”

Naqvi said Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is in the United Kingdom, adding that a final decision on the matter will be taken then. 

“We obey the government of Pakistan, not the ICC,” the PCB chairman said. 

Pakistan play all their T20 World Cup matches in Sri Lanka, which are the co-hosts of the tournament. The T20 World Cup 2026 begins next month in India and Sri Lanka. 

The Green Shirts play their first match of the tournament against Netherlands on Feb. 7. They are scheduled to play defending champions India on Feb. 15 in Colombo in their group stage clash.