Authorities impose curfew in three northwestern Pakistani districts amid rise in militant attacks

A soldier stands guard along the border fence at the Angoor Adda outpost on the border with Afghanistan in South Waziristan, Pakistan, on October 18, 2017. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 13 September 2025
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Authorities impose curfew in three northwestern Pakistani districts amid rise in militant attacks

  • Pakistan has been rocked by back-to-back militant attacks, including a train hijacking, in its western regions that border Afghanistan in recent weeks
  • The precarious security situation on Tuesday huddled together the civil-military leadership, which called for a unified stance to counter the surge

ISLAMABAD: The local administration has imposed a curfew in several areas of northwestern Pakistani districts of North Waziristan, South Waziristan and Tank on Wednesday, the respective district authorities said, amid a rise in militant attacks in the South Asian country.

Pakistan has witnessed a sharp increase in militant attacks in its northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and southwestern Balochistan provinces, with an unprecedented train hijacking killing 31 people, including security men, in Balochistan’s Bolan range last week, followed by a suicide attack in Nushki that killed five people on Sunday. In KP, the Pakistani Taliban, or the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), and other militant groups have mounted their attacks in recent months, frequently targeting security forces convoys and check-posts, besides targeted killings and kidnappings of law enforcers and government officials.

The precarious security situation prompted top Pakistani civilian and military leaders to huddle together at the Parliament House on Tuesday to carve out a strategy to deal with the renewed wave of militancy. Senior military and intelligence officials briefed participants at Tuesday’s meeting, following which Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif called on the country’s political leadership to unite in its resolve to combat militants with “the full force of the state.”

The office of the deputy commission in KP’s Tank district announced that a curfew will remain in place from 6am till 6pm from Kaur Fort to Manzi-Khirgi to Jandola areas on Wednesday, while the Dabarra market will also remain closed during this period, citing “heightened threat” to the movement of law enforcement agencies.

“All concerned are requested to cooperate with security forces and avoid traveling during curfew hours,” the Tank deputy commissioner’s office said in a notification.

The development comes weeks after a paramilitary troop and 12 militants were killed in a gunbattle in the district after the militants carried out a suicide attack at the Frontier Constabulary (FC) headquarters, a police official with direct knowledge of the development said.

The attack took place in the Jandola tehsil.

In South Waziristan, a curfew will remain imposed along the Aziz Abad Chowk-Sarwakal-Jandola, Spin Jumat-Asman Manza-Ladha-Makin, and Bibi Raghzai-Kotkai-Jandola roads, according to the local administration.

Authorities in North Waziristan asked people to abide by the curfew from 6am till 6pm in Nawaz Kot Bridge to Dunkan, Tehsil Razmak, and Dunkan to Malogai Bridge in Tehsil Dossali in the wake of “current spell of insurgency, terrorism and targeting of security forces by the militants.”

Both North and South Waziristan districts, which border Afghanistan, had been a stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban before successive military operations drove the militants out of the region more than a decade ago.

Pakistan ranks as the second-most affected country by terrorism, according to The Global Terrorism Index 2025. Militancy-related deaths surged by 45%, rising from 748 in 2023 to 1,081 in 2024, marking one of the steepest global increases.

Militant attacks in Pakistan more than doubled from 517 in 2023 to 1,099 in 2024. Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa remained the hardest-hit provinces, accounting for over 96 percent of attacks and fatalities.

Pakistani officials have accused the neighboring India and Afghanistan of fanning militancy in KP and Balochistan provinces. New Delhi and Kabul both deny the accusation.


Pakistan, global crypto exchange discuss modernizing digital payments, creating job prospects 

Updated 05 December 2025
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Pakistan, global crypto exchange discuss modernizing digital payments, creating job prospects 

  • Pakistani officials, Binance team discuss coordination between Islamabad, local banks and global exchanges
  • Pakistan has attempted to tap into growing crypto market to curb illicit transactions, improve oversight

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s finance officials and the team of a global cryptocurrency exchange on Friday held discussions aimed at modernizing the country’s digital payments system and building local talent pipelines to meet rising demand for blockchain and Web3 skills, the finance ministry said.

The development took place during a high-level meeting between Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (PVARA) Chairman Bilal bin Saqib, domestic bank presidents and a Binance team led by Global CEO Richard Teng. The meeting was held to advance work on Pakistan’s National Digital Asset Framework, a regulatory setup to govern Pakistan’s digital assets.

Pakistan has been moving to regulate its fast-growing crypto and digital assets market by bringing virtual asset service providers (VASPs) under a formal licensing regime. Officials say the push is aimed at curbing illicit transactions, improving oversight, and encouraging innovation in blockchain-based financial services.

“Participants reviewed opportunities to modernize Pakistan’s digital payments landscape, noting that blockchain-based systems could significantly reduce costs from the country’s $38 billion annual remittance flows,” the finance ministry said in a statement. 

“Discussions also emphasized building local talent pipelines to meet rising global demand for blockchain and Web3 skills, creating high-value employment prospects for Pakistani youth.”

Blockchain is a type of digital database that is shared, transparent and tamper-resistant. Instead of being stored on one computer, the data is kept on a distributed network of computers, making it very hard to alter or hack.

Web3 refers to the next generation of the Internet built using blockchain, focusing on giving users more control over their data, identity and digital assets rather than big tech companies controlling it.

Participants of the meeting also discussed sovereign debt tokenization, which is the process of converting a country’s debt such as government bonds, into digital tokens on a blockchain, the ministry said. 

Aurangzeb called for close coordination between the government, domestic banks and global exchanges to modernize Pakistan’s payment landscape.

Participants of the meeting also discussed considering a “time-bound amnesty” to encourage users to move assets onto regulated platforms, stressing the need for stronger verifications and a risk-mitigation system.

Pakistan has attempted in recent months to tap into the country’s growing crypto market, crack down on money laundering and terror financing, and promote responsible innovation — a move analysts say could bring an estimated $25 billion in virtual assets into the tax net.

In September, Islamabad invited international crypto exchanges and other VASPs to apply for licenses to operate in the country, a step aimed at formalizing and regulating its fast-growing digital market.