Women among eight killed in shootings in southwest Pakistan near Iran border

A security personnel stands guard along a street near the site of a school bus bombing in the Khuzdar district of Balochistan province on May 21, 2025. (AFP/File)
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Updated 24 February 2026
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Women among eight killed in shootings in southwest Pakistan near Iran border

  • Six people were killed in shootout between unidentified gunmen and local residents in Panjgur district, says police official
  • Says in second incident, border forces fired upon truck carrying illegal Afghan migrants after it did not stop at security checkpost

QUETTA: At least eight people, including two Afghan women, were killed in separate shooting incidents in a southwestern Pakistani district that borders Iran, a police official said this week. 

Both incidents took place on Monday and in Balochistan’s Panjgur district. The first incident took place near the Chedgi border crossing with Iran, located around 80 kilometers from Panjgur city, Deputy Superintendent of Police Javed Ahmed said. Armed men ambushed what he said were a group of “state-backed” locals working near the border. He did not elaborate further about their affiliation nor the nature of their work. 

“After an intense gunbattle between the attackers and the local residents, six people were killed,” Ahmed told Arab News on Monday. “Armed men torched two vehicles before leaving the area.”

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack but ethnic Baloch separatist groups, the most prominent among them the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), often target tribal leaders and local residents that are backed by the state. 

Ahmed said families of the deceased did not bring the bodies to a hospital for autopsy as the terrain there is mountainous and the roads are in a dilapidated condition. Instead, the victims’ relatives buried the bodies in their hometown close to the Iran border. 

The second shooting incident took place in Prom, a border town in the same district located around 110 kilometers from Panjgur city, during the wee hours of Monday. A pickup truck carrying illegal Afghan migrants attempted to escape a border security checkpost, prompting border forces to fire at the vehicle, the police official said. 
 
“Pakistani border forces asked the driver to stop but he sped up the pickup truck,” Ahmed said. “As a result of border security forces’ firing, two Afghan women boarded on the Zamyad pickup truck were killed and three other illegal migrants were injured who were later shifted to the hospital.”
 
Every year, thousands of Afghan migrants travel illegally through the mountainous and deserted routes through Balochistan to Iran and ultimately, Europe. 

Balochistan, which shares porous borders with Afghanistan and Iran, has been the scene of a low-lying insurgency for decades. Militants have frequently targeted government officials, security forces, laborers and Chinese personnel in the area. 

Separatist militant groups such as the BLA accuse the government of exploiting the province’s resources and denying locals a fair share in them. Pakistan’s government rejects the allegations and says it is undertaking several social and economic initiatives in the province to uplift the local population. 

The shootings occur as the security situation in the province sharply deteriorates in recent months. The BLA carried out a series of coordinated attacks in multiple locations across the province on Jan. 30-31, killing at least 36 civilians and 22 law enforcement personnel, the government said. Pakistan’s military said it killed 216 militants in counter-offensive operations. 

On Sunday, unidentified gunmen kidnapped nine laborers from two construction sites in the province.


Thousands of Afghans displaced by Kabul-Islamabad conflict

Updated 03 March 2026
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Thousands of Afghans displaced by Kabul-Islamabad conflict

  • The neighbors have clashed since Thursday when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes
  • Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram

KABUL: More than 8,000 Afghans have been forced from their homes by fighting with Pakistani forces along the border in recent days, the Taliban government said Tuesday.

The neighbors have clashed along the frontier since Thursday, when Afghanistan launched a border offensive in retaliation for Pakistani air strikes.

Islamabad has hit back along the border and with fresh air strikes, bombing multiple sites including the former US air base at Bagram, the capital Kabul and the southern city of Kandahar.

“Due to these brutal bombings and attacks, 8,400 of our families have been displaced, forced to leave their villages and homes,” Afghan deputy government spokesman Hamdullah Fitrat said at a news conference.

An AFP journalist near the frontier has spoken to residents who have fled the clashes.

Afghanistan’s defense ministry reported “extensive and heavy offensive and revenge attacks” across seven provinces over the past day.

The government acknowledged earlier air strikes on Bagram for the first time.

“Yes, the enemy targeted Bagram as well, but there were no casualties or damage,” defense ministry spokesman Enayatullah Khowarazmi said.

Two residents told AFP on Sunday that they heard air strikes in Bagram, north of the capital.

Pakistani security sources said strikes at Bagram were based on “credible intelligence” to disrupt the “supply of critical equipment and stores” for Afghan soldiers and militants fighting Pakistan forces along the frontier.

They said Pakistan reserves the right to respond to the Taliban government’s “aggression along its border by striking legitimate targets at the time and place of its own choice.”

Pakistani fighter jets also flew nighttime sorties over Kabul, another security source told AFP.

UN ‘ALARMED’
Islamabad’s confirmation that its aircraft flew over the Afghan capital came hours after AFP journalists in the city heard multiple explosions.

The blasts were heard alongside anti-aircraft weapons and gunfire from across the city.

An AFP journalist in Jalalabad city, between Kabul and the frontier, reported hearing explosions and various weapons being fired.

At the nearest border crossing, around 50 kilometers (30 miles) from Jalalabad, residents in Torkham told AFP the days-long fighting was ongoing.

The latest casualties include three children killed in a “crime committed by the Pakistani military regime” in Kunar province, Fitrat said Monday.

At least 39 civilians have been killed since Thursday, the Afghan government said, a toll which Pakistan has not commented on.

The UN children’s charity said it was “alarmed” by reports of child casualties in the conflict, and called on all sides to “exercise maximum restraint, protect civilian lives.”

Pakistan said its February air strikes that sparked the escalation were targeting militants.

Islamabad accuses Afghanistan of failing to act against militant groups that carry out attacks in Pakistan, which the Taliban government rejects.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar said on Tuesday it was “never too late to talk,” but warned: “We will finish this menace.”

The Afghan defense ministry spokesman said more than 25 soldiers have been killed, while estimating Pakistani fatalities among troops at around 150.

Pakistan says more than 430 Afghan soldiers have been killed, with more than 630 wounded.

Casualty claims from both sides are difficult to verify independently.

The violence of recent days is the worst since October fighting killed more than 70 people on both sides, with land borders between the neighbors largely shut since.