ISLAMABAD: At least four people were killed on Monday when a car collided with a gas tanker in Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, the provincial rescue service said.
The collision took place in Daraban area of KP’s Dera Ismail Khan district and the deceased included a nine-year-old child, according to a Rescue 1122 spokesperson.
The cause of the accident could not be immediately known.
“Bodies of all those killed were shifted to hospital,” the spokesperson said. “All deceased person hailed from Darazanda tehsil.”
Road accidents are common in Pakistan, where highways and roads are poorly maintained and traffic laws are widely ignored.
Last month, a speeding truck carrying laborers, women and children fell into a ravine in the southern Sindh province, killing at least 13 people and injuring 20 others, police said.
In Dec., at least 18 passengers were killed in two separate road crashes in Pakistan’s eastern Punjab and southern Sindh provinces, authorities said.
Four killed in car, gas tanker collision in Pakistan’s northwest
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Four killed in car, gas tanker collision in Pakistan’s northwest
- Road accidents are common in Pakistan, where highways and roads are poorly maintained and traffic laws are widely ignored
- Last month, a speeding truck carrying laborers, women and children fell into a ravine in Sindh, killing at least 13 people
Pakistan military warns it will not tolerate any ‘malicious interest, political or otherwise’
- Chief of Defense Forces Field Marshal Asim Munir chairs 273rd Corps Commanders Conference in Rawalpindi
- Statement follows recently increased tensions between former PM Imran Khan and Pakistan’s military
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s top military brass warned on Wednesday it would not tolerate any “malicious interest, political or otherwise,” that undermines national unity and security, the military’s media wing said on Wednesday.
The statement was released by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) after Chief of Defense Forces Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir chaired the 273rd Corps Commanders Conference (CC) at the General Headquarters of the military in Rawalpindi.
Pakistan’s powerful military has been at loggerheads with former prime minister Imran Khan and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party recently. Earlier this month, Pakistan military’s spokesperson warned during a hard-hitting press conference that Khan’s frequent criticism of the armed forces was becoming a “national security threat,” warning of a severe response.
“The Forum categorically rejected the nexus between terrorism, crime, and vested political interests,” the ISPR said in a statement.
“It resolved that no malicious interest, political or otherwise, aimed at undermining national unity, security and stability would be tolerated, nor would anyone be allowed to create divisions between the Armed Forces and the people of Pakistan.”
The CCC also reviewed Pakistan’s prevailing internal and external security environment, with particular emphasis on evolving threats and operational preparedness, the military’s media wing said.
The commanders paid tribute to the armed forces for conducting several intelligence-based counter-terrorism operations across the country in recent months.
“The participants reaffirmed that all terrorists under the tutelage of Indian sponsors, along with their facilitators and abettors, would be dealt with decisively and without exception,” the statement said.
Pakistan accuses India of supporting militant attacks in its territory, a charge that New Delhi denies.
Khan, who is in jail since August 2023 on charges that he says are politically motivated, has criticized the military since he was ousted from the prime minister’s office via a parliamentary vote in April 2022. Khan blames the military for colluding with his political rivals to orchestrate his ouster, a charge the army denies.
The former prime minister alleges he is being denied basic rights at the prison in Rawalpindi where he is incarcerated at the behest of the military and the government.
Both deny the allegations, with the military specifically saying it does not interfere in political matters.










