Pakistan army kills 30 militants trying to cross from Afghanistan
Islamabad has routinely blamed its western neighbour Afghanistan for allowing militant groups to operate on its soil.
ISLAMABAD - Pakistan's army said on July 4 it had killed 30 militants attempting to cross the border from Afghanistan over the last three days, after a suicide attack killed 16 soldiers in the same region.
The militants belonged to the Pakistan Taliban or its affiliated groups, the military said in a statement accusing archfoe India of backing them.
'The security forces demonstrated exceptional professionalism, vigilance preparedness, and prevented a potential catastrophe,' it said.
'A large quantity of weapons, ammunition and explosives was also recovered,' the statement added.
The killings took place in the border district of North Waziristan, where last week a faction of the Pakistan Taliban claimed a
suicide blast on the military .
Islamabad has routinely blamed its western neighbour Afghanistan for allowing militant groups to operate on its soil, but in recent months it has also ramped up accusations against India to its east for backing the groups.
Both neighbours deny any involvement.
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Nuclear-armed India and Pakistan in May
traded the worst violence in decades during a four-day conflict that killed 70 people on both sides.
It was triggered by New Delhi's accusation that Islamabad supported gunmen
killing 26 people on April 22 , the worst attack on civilians in the contested Kashmir region in years.
Islamabad has denied any involvement.
Since their independence from British rule, India and Pakistan have frequently fought over Kashmir, a divided region claimed in full by both sides.
Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on July 4 lauded the security forces for 'thwarting an infiltration attempt'.
'We are determined to completely eliminate all forms of terrorism from the country,' his office said.
The prime minister's statement also accused New Delhi of fomenting militancy in Pakistan.
Violence has surged in Pakistan's border regions since the
Taliban's 2021 return to power and last year was the deadliest in a decade.
The Pakistan Taliban, a separate group from the Afghan Taliban but with a shared ideology, is active around the north-west border with Afghanistan.
Pakistan's military is also fighting an insurgency against Baloch separatist groups in the southwestern border area.
Over 290 people, mostly security officials, have been killed in attacks since the start of 2025 by armed groups, according to an AFP tally.
In June, Pakistan's government raised its defence spending by 20 per cent, allocating 14 per cent of its overall federal budget to the military. AFP
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