Death toll rises to 10 in Pakistan supply convoy ambush — police

Truck drivers gather beside aid supply trucks, parked along a roadside in Hangu on January 4, 2025, after gunmen ambushed a Pakistan aid convoy. (AFP/File)
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Updated 17 January 2025
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Death toll rises to 10 in Pakistan supply convoy ambush — police

  • The attack happened Thursday when trucks carrying food, medicine and other relief supplies were heading to Kurram
  • Five drivers were still missing and their trucks had been burned by the attackers, a local police official says

Peshawar: The death toll from an ambush on a Pakistan convoy bringing supplies to a region besieged by sectarian fighting rose to 10 on Friday, police said, while up to six drivers have been kidnapped.
The Thursday ambush targeted a convoy of 33 vehicles set to resupply local traders in the northwest Kurram region with rice, flour and cooking oil and two aid vehicles carrying essential medicine.
“The deceased include two security personnel, four drivers... and four civilians,” a local police official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
“There are reports that five to six drivers have been abducted by a local tribe,” he said.
Kurram has been wracked by Sunni-Shiite violence for decades, but around 140 people have been killed since a fresh bout of fighting broke out in November.
As feuding tribes have battled with machine guns and heavy weapons, the remote and mountainous region bordering Afghanistan has been largely cut off from the outside world.
Numerous ceasefires have been touted, most recently on January 1, but none have stopped the violence.


Pakistan defense minister discusses regional, global developments with counterparts in Munich

Updated 14 February 2026
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Pakistan defense minister discusses regional, global developments with counterparts in Munich

  • The high-powered meeting of government leaders, diplomats comes shortly before Russia’s war on Ukraine enters its fifth gruelling year
  • Bruised by President Donald Trump’s comments, European leaders at summit have pledged to shoulder more of the burden of shared defenses

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Defense Minister Khawaja Asif on Friday met his Italian and Albanian counterparts to discuss bilateral cooperation and regional and global developments on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, the Pakistani embassy in Germany said.

The high-powered Munich meeting of government leaders, diplomats, defense and intelligence chiefs comes shortly before Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine is set to enter its fifth gruelling year.

Bruised by President Donald Trump’s designs on Greenland and his often hostile comments about America’s traditional bedrock allies, European leaders at the conference have pledged to shoulder more of the burden of shared defenses.

Asif met his Italian counterpart Guido Crosetto during the conference, running from Feb. 13 till Feb. 15, with both sides agreeing to enhance bilateral ties, according to the Pakistani embassy.

“Asif met the Defense Minister of Republic of Albania, Mr. Pirro Vengu, on the sidelines of the 62nd Munich Security Conference,” the Pakistani embassy said on X.

“Discussed matters related to enhancing bilateral cooperation in the wake of recent regional and international developments.”

The development came as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was set to address European leaders on Saturday as they try to step up their autonomy in defense while salvaging transatlantic ties badly strained under President Trump.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz acknowledged a “rift” had opened up between Europe and the United States, fueled by culture wars, but issued an appeal to Washington: “Let’s repair and revive transatlantic trust together.”

“In the era of great power rivalry, even the United States will not be powerful enough to go it alone,” said the conservative leader, who has ramped up defense spending in the top EU economy.

Macron said a new framework was needed to deal with “an aggressive Russia” once the fighting in Ukraine ends.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has been in Munich since Friday and meeting multiple allies, was expected to address the meeting on Saturday. No Russian officials have been invited.

Kremlin critic Mikhail Khodorkovsky said he feared “a new cold war” between Europe and Russia in the coming decade, making reopening dialogue with Moscow essential.

“If it makes sense to talk, we are willing to talk,” said Merz, but he also charged that “Russia is not yet willing to talk seriously.”