Mortar kills 2 children and their mother in northwest Pakistan where troops are targeting militants

Volunteers offer water to Internally Displaced People, who flee from their homes due to security forces launched a targeted operation against militants, at a highway near Khar, the main town of Bajaur, a northwestern Pakistani district bordering Afghanistan. (AP)
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Updated 13 August 2025
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Mortar kills 2 children and their mother in northwest Pakistan where troops are targeting militants

  • Government officials said the ongoing offensive against the Pakistani Taliban has displaced 25,000 families or an estimated 100,000 people in Bajaur, where authorities eased a curfew on Wednesday, allowing residents to buy essential items

KHAR: A mortar struck a home and killed two children and their mother in a northwestern Pakistani region where security forces are carrying out a “targeted operation ” against the Pakistani Taliban, residents and a hospital official said Wednesday.
It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the overnight civilian casualties in Mamund, a town in the Bajaur district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan.
Naseeb Gul, a medical doctor at a local hospital, said the dead were two children and their mother. Two people were also wounded Tuesday when another mortar hit their home, he said.
Angered by the deaths, hundreds of demonstrators were refusing to bury the bodies and demanding an investigation, according to local villager Mohammad Khalid.
There was no immediate comment from the government or the military.
The latest development came days after security forces launched an offensive in Bajaur to target militant hideouts. The provincial government said the “targeted operation” was launched after tribal elders failed to evict insurgents from the region.
Government officials said the ongoing offensive against the Pakistani Taliban has displaced 25,000 families or an estimated 100,000 people in Bajaur, where authorities eased a curfew on Wednesday, allowing residents to buy essential items.
Thousands of displaced people are currently residing in government buildings, and many other have gone to other safer areas to live with relatives.
The Bajaur offensive is the second operation there since 2009, when the military launched a large-scale campaign against the Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP. The TTP is a separate but a close ally of the Afghan Taliban, who seized power in Afghanistan in August 2021.
Many TTP leaders and fighters have found sanctuary in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover and have been living there openly. Some have crossed the border back into Bajaur to carry out attacks.


India signs free trade deal with Oman, expands footprint in Gulf region

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India signs free trade deal with Oman, expands footprint in Gulf region

  • Agreement is India’s second CEPA with a GCC state and Oman’s first such deal in two decades
  • Deal opens tariff-free access for most Indian exports and simplifies visa regime for professionals

NEW DELHI: India signed a free trade agreement with Oman on Thursday, marking its second such deal with a Gulf Cooperation Council country and expanding its economic presence in the region.

The Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement was signed by Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal and Qais bin Mohammed Al-Yousef, ‘s minister of commerce, during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s state visit to Muscat.

The new deal allows India to export most of its goods without paying tariffs, covering 98 percent of the total value of India’s exports to Oman.

Beyond tariff cuts and goods, the agreement covers services, investment and mobility facilitation, and cooperation in sectors such as textiles, vehicles, agro-chemicals, and renewables.

“The CEPA will act as an enabler of a more ambitious future by offering duty-free access, addressing trade barriers, and simplifying rules. It will allow our exports to be more competitively priced in each other’s economies,” Goyal said.

“The comprehensive economic partnership would facilitate greater market access for our professionals and firms supporting Oman’s Vision 2040 ... The CEPA allows fair and predictable visa regime and labor mobility for our skilled workforce while fully respecting Oman’s sovereign employment policies.”

Indian professionals working in Oman on short-term assignments will be allowed to stay for up to two years, up from the previous 90 days, with the option to extend for another two years.

Oman is one of Delhi’s smaller GCC trading partners — trailing behind the UAE and Saudi Arabia, with bilateral trade of about $10 billion, according to India’s trade ministry. But it is strategically important to India due to its location near the Strait of Hormuz, a key passage for Asia’s crude oil.

Hosting 700,000 Indian citizens, it is also home to the fifth-largest population of Indians working overseas.

Free trade negotiations between India and Oman began in November 2023, with the first round in New Delhi and the second in Muscat. When the talks concluded in March 2024, Oman sought revisions on market-access terms and the final signature was postponed.

The Shoura Council, Oman’s consultative and legislative body, approved the CEPA draft last week.

The pact is the second such trade agreement with a GCC country after a 2022 CEPA with the UAE. For Oman, it is the second such bilateral deal after the Oman-US free trade agreement signed in 2006.

“The agreement is a strategic instrument to boost investments, enhance supply chains, and promote joint growth not only in trade but also in production, innovation, and regional integration,” Al-Yousef told Indian business leaders, as quoted by the Oman News Agency before the deal was signed.

“The historic trade routes that once connected our ports remain vital today, linking India to the Gulf, East Africa, and global markets through Oman’s advanced logistics corridors, ports, and industrial hubs.”