Five dead, five injured as passenger bus catches fire in southwestern Pakistan

Bystanders look at the wreckage of a bus in Noshki town of Balochistan province on March 17, 2025, a day after an explosives laden car hit one of the seven buses of a convoy. (AFP/File)
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Updated 24 June 2025
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Five dead, five injured as passenger bus catches fire in southwestern Pakistan

  • Bus caught fire in Quetta after colliding with qingqi rickshaw reportedly carrying petrol, says official
  • Balochistan government launches probe into incident, vows stern action against those responsible

ISLAMABAD: Five persons were killed and five others were injured in southwestern Pakistan on Tuesday after a passenger bus caught fire following its collision with a three-wheeled qingqi rickshaw, a senior official said. 

The incident took place on the Western Bypass road in Balochistan’s provincial capital Quetta, the provincial government’s spokesperson Shahid Rind said. He said the passenger bus caught fire after colliding with the qingqi, which was reportedly carrying petrol. 

“We express our heartfelt sympathy to the families of the passengers who died in the tragic accident,” Rind said in a statement. “The injured are being provided with immediate and best medical assistance.”

Three of the injured are being treated in the city’s Civil Hospital while two have been admitted to the Bolan Medical Complex, Rind said. 

He said the provincial government has started probing the incident, adding that strict action will be taken against all those found responsible for the accident once the investigation is completed. 

“All possible help and support will be provided to the affected families,” Rind said. 

Road accidents are frequent in southwestern Pakistan, where drivers often lack proper training and often disregard traffic rules and regulations. 

In April, 19 people were killed and over 40 injured in an oil tanker blast that took place in Balochistan’s Nushki district. 


Snow slide during clearance operation in Pakistan’s north kills three, including army officer

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Snow slide during clearance operation in Pakistan’s north kills three, including army officer

  • The military says the incident occurred at the high-altitude Burzil Pass in the Gilgit-Baltistan region
  • PM Sharif pays tribute to the fallen personnel, praising their duty despite severe winter conditions

ISLAMABAD: A snow slide during a military-led clearance operation at the high-altitude Burzil Pass in northern Pakistan killed two soldiers and a civilian machine operator in the early hours of Saturday, the Pakistani military said.

The incident occurred around 2 a.m. on Jan. 3 while heavy machinery was being used to clear snow and reopen the pass to facilitate the operational movement of Pakistani forces.

Located in Gilgit-Baltistan, Burzil Pass sits on a rugged, high-altitude route linking Astore to Gurez near the Line of Control with Indian-administered Kashmir.

“On night 2/3 January 2026, a Snow Clearance Operation was conducted, using heavy machinery to open Burzil Pass to facilitate operational movement of own forces in the area,” the military’s media wing, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), said.

It added that the operation was being led by Captain Asmad, 28, when the snow slide struck, trapping him along with two soldiers and a civilian operator from the public works department.

“All four individuals were rescued from snow,” ISPR continued. “However, the condition of Captain Asmad, Sepoy Rizwan (age 32 years, resident of Attock) and Machine Operator Essa (resident of Astore) deteriorated and all three individuals embraced Shahadat [martyrdom].”

The military said these individuals “rendered ultimate sacrifice” by carrying out a challenging operation in extreme weather conditions to facilitate the operational movement of the forces in the area.

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif later paid tribute to the deceased, saying they performed their duty despite the dangers posed by heavy snowfall, according to a statement released by his office.

“The martyrs carried on with the task of opening the snow-affected Burzil Pass without regard for their own lives and played their role in ensuring movement,” Sharif said, while offering condolences to their families.