
27 hostages killed after hijacked Pakistan train rescue ends in bloodbath
QUETTA — Nearly 350 hostages have been rescued at the end of a deadly standoff between Pakistan's military and armed militants who hijacked a train in the southwestern Pakistani province of Balochistan, a security source told CNN Wednesday. The incident, which began Tuesday left dozens dead.
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a militant separatist group active in the restive and mineral-rich Balochistan province, claimed responsibility for the attack.
A total of 27 hostages were killed by the BLA, the security source said, as well as one soldier. At least 35 militants were killed in the rescue operation, the security source added.
Around 450 passengers were on the Jaffer Express enroute from Balochistan's capital Quetta to Peshawar in the north, when militants opened 'intense gunfire' as the train traveled through a tunnel early in its journey, according to officials.
Pakistan's military then launched an operation to confront the attackers who used 'women and children as shields,' according to security sources not authorized to speak to CNN.
One rescued woman described scenes of chaos following the attack, likening it to the 'Day of Judgement.' She told CNN she fled gunfire and walked for two hours to reach safety.
Passenger Mohammad Ashraf told CNN he saw more than 100 armed individuals on the train and that no harm was inflicted on women and children.
The security sources accused the militants of being in contact with handlers in Afghanistan.
Pakistan's military and government have long accused Afghanistan of providing sanctuary to militant groups, something its Taliban leaders have denied.
Tuesday's kidnapping is an audacious moment for a separatist insurgency that seeks greater political autonomy and economic development in the strategically important and mineral-rich mountainous region.
But it also highlights the ever-deteriorating security situation there – one that Pakistan's government has been grappling with for decades.
Balochistan's population – made up mostly of the ethnic Baloch group – is deeply disenfranchised, impoverished, and has been growing increasingly alienated from the federal government by decades of policies widely seen as discriminatory.
An insurgency there has been ongoing for decades but has gained traction in recent years since the province's deep-water Gwadar port was leased to China, the jewel in the crown of Beijing's 'Belt and Road' infrastructure push in Pakistan.
The port, often touted as 'the next Dubai,' has become a security nightmare with persistent bombings of vehicles carrying Chinese workers, resulting in many deaths.
Some analysts said Tuesday's attack marked an escalation in the sophistication of attacks by the insurgents.
The 'larger point that the Pakistani state is not grasping ... is that it's not business as usual anymore,' said Abdul Basit, a Senior Associate Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.
'The insurgency has evolved both in its strategy and scale,' he added, saying Pakistan's approach to tackle the Baloch militants' 'seem to have run its course.'
'Instead of revising its counterproductive policies, it is persisting with them, resulting in recurrent security and intelligence failures,' Basit said.
The BLA has been responsible for the deadliest attacks in Pakistan in the past year.
A suicide bombing by the BLA at a train station in Quetta killed more than two dozen people last November. The previous month, it claimed responsibility for an attack on a convoy of Chinese engineers, resulting in two deaths.
In the wake of Tuesday's attack, Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif vowed to 'continue to fight against the monster of terrorism until it is completely eradicated from the country.'
In a statement, he said the 'terrorists' targeting of innocent passengers during the peaceful and blessed month of Ramadan is a clear reflection that these terrorists have no connection with the religion of Islam, Pakistan and Balochistan.'
Analysts say such attacks need urgent attention from the federal government.
'(Tuesday's attack) has gained global attention and it will worry China, which has its investments in the province – more than any other state,' said Basit. 'A major reset of existing security paradigm is required in Balochistan.' — CNN
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