
At least nine bus passengers abducted, shot dead by militants in Pakistan
Security forces are battling a rise in ethnic and separatist violence in impoverished but mineral-rich Balochistan, which borders Afghanistan and Iran.
The militants boarded two buses on a major highway and checked passengers' identity cards before forcing nine people off the vehicles at gunpoint overnight on Thursday.
"The terrorists forced the two passenger buses to stop on a highway and pulled nine passengers out. They took them in an area nearby and killed all of them," local government official Naveed Alam told AFP.
The attackers specifically targeted people from Punjab, the country's most populous and prosperous province and a major recruitment base for the military.
"The forces found the dead bodies all belong to different areas of Punjab," said Saadat Hussain, another senior government official.
The Balochistan Liberation Front (BLA), a separatist group fighting the state, later claimed responsibility for the attack.
The BLA has emerged as the biggest threat targeting foreign interests, security forces and Pakistanis from outside the province.
Baloch separatists and rights groups say the military's heavy-handed counter-terrorism response to the insurgency has included widespread enforced disappearances and extrajudicial killings.
Balochistan is rich in hydrocarbons and minerals, but 70 percent of its 15 million inhabitants live below the poverty line.
In March, the militant group was behind a deadly train siege with more than 450 passengers on board.
Last year was the deadliest in a decade for Pakistan, with a surge in attacks that killed more than 1,600 people, according to Islamabad-based analysis group the Center for Research and Security Studies.
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