Four including district administrator killed in militant attack on convoy in northwest Pakistan

Security personnel stand guard at the site of a suicide attack outside the border force headquarters in Peshawar, Pakistan, on November 24, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 02 December 2025
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Four including district administrator killed in militant attack on convoy in northwest Pakistan

  • Assistant commissioner, two police officers and a civilian killed in convoy ambush in Bannu
  • Attack comes amid sharp rise in cross-border militancy and worsening Pakistan–Afghanistan tensions

PESHAWAR: A militant attack on a government convoy in northwest Pakistan on Tuesday killed a senior district administrator, two police officers and a civilian, officials said, marking the latest escalation in a wave of violence gripping the country’s border regions with Afghanistan.

The assault took place in Bannu, a district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province that has seen repeated attacks since the Pakistani Taliban, or TTP, ended a fragile ceasefire with the state in late 2022. Pakistan has blamed the Afghan Taliban government for allowing anti-Pakistan groups like the TTP to operate from Afghan soil, a charge Kabul denies, as Islamabad struggles to contain a surge in shootings, bombings and targeted killings across KP and other parts of the country. 

In Tuesday’s assault, the convoy of Assistant Commissioner North Waziristan Shah Wali was ambushed near Sher Brick Kiln on Miranshah Road. Wali, two policemen and a civilian were killed, police said. 

KP Information Minister Shafi Jan condemned the assault, calling it “a heinous and cowardly act, and we will not let the terrorists succeed in their nefarious designs.”

“The martyrdom of Assistant Commissioner Shah Wali is a significant loss for the province, and his services to the region will always be remembered. We will continue to stand strong against terrorism,” Jan said in a statement. 

In a separate statement, KP Chief Minister Sohail Afridi also denounced the attack. 

“The attack is highly regrettable and condemnable. The enemies of the country cannot deter us with such cowardly acts,” he said.

Afridi directed the provincial police chief to submit a detailed report and ordered “immediate and best medical treatment to the injured.”

No group has claimed Tuesday’s assault. 

Pakistan has experienced an intense escalation in violence over the past two years, with security officials attributing much of the renewed militancy to TTP fighters allegedly operating from sanctuaries inside Afghanistan. Kabul denies the accusation and says Islamabad must address its own internal security challenges.

Tensions between the two neighbors peaked in October 2025, when a series of deadly clashes along the border killed dozens of soldiers on both sides. Pakistan said Afghan forces had carried out unprovoked attacks. The Taliban government accused Pakistan of violating its territorial sovereignty through airstrikes. 

Following the clashes, the two sides held talks in Istanbul, but the discussions failed to produce a breakthrough. Issues related to cross-border militant attacks, border management and refugee repatriations remain unresolved, contributing to one of the most strained periods in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations in years.


Islamabad says engagement with Afghanistan hinges on action against militant groups

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Islamabad says engagement with Afghanistan hinges on action against militant groups

  • Tensions have been high between Islamabad and Kabul over the increase in militant attacks inside Pakistan
  • Minister says economic aspects do come in between, but Pakistan's security remains their highest priority

KARACHI: Any engagement between Pakistan and Afghanistan depends on concrete action by Kabul against militant groups, Pakistan's commerce minister said on Monday, citing a surge in militant attacks inside Pakistan.

Tensions have been high between Islamabad and Kabul over the increase in militant attacks that Pakistan has blamed on Afghanistan-based militant groups, an allegation denied by the Taliban authorities.

The attacks triggered one of the worst skirmishes between the neighbors in Oct. last year, after Islamabad hit what it called Pakistani Taliban targets inside Afghanistan. Pakistan has since suspended all trade with Afghanistan, despite a ceasefire reached in Doha on Oct. 19.

Commerce Minister Jam Kamal Khan said on Monday that Pakistan has made it clear at all levels that it could not make any compromise on its security and that militants using Afghan soil need to be "handled."

"If we have to engage in any form, Afghanistan has to address this aspect of terrorism first," he said on X. "In recent months, many such incidents have taken place and we see an increase in it."

There was no immediate response to the statement from the Afghan side, which comes as the suspension of trade between the neighbors has been severely impacting traders on either side of the border.

Kamal said they welcomed any dialogue and ways to facilitate trade but could not pursue them in the presence of militant "safe havens" in Afghanistan.

"Economic aspects do come in between, however, we keep our sovereignty and security as the highest priority," he added.