Pakistani militants kill six policemen in eight targeted attacks
The attacks targeted police stations, checkpoints and patrols across seven districts in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, police officer Mohammad Ali Babakhel said, as the nation of 240 million people celebrated its 78th independence day.
The militants used rocket-propelled grenade launchers in some of the attacks, he said, adding six officers were killed and another nine injured. A spike in the attacks in recent months is a tough challenge to handle for the overstretched and under-equipped police force, the frontline against militant attacks.
The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), a Pakistani militant group with links to the Afghan Taliban, claimed responsibility for the attacks.
The TTP is an umbrella group of several extremist groups. It has been fighting against the state since 2007 in a bid to overthrow the government and replace it with its version of religious law. Attacks have accelerated since the TTP revoked a ceasefire with the Pakistani government in late 2022.
In 2024, militants carried out 335 countrywide attacks, killing 520 people, according to the Pakistan Institute for Peace Studies, an independent organization.
Pakistan says the militants operate out of neighboring Afghanistan, where they train fighters and plan attacks, a charge Kabul has denied.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Asharq Al-Awsat
3 hours ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
US to Explore Cooperation with Pakistan on Critical Minerals, Hydrocarbons
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Washington looked forward to exploring cooperation with Pakistan on critical minerals and hydrocarbons, with his comments coming in a statement issued by the State Department on Pakistan's Independence Day. WHY IT'S IMPORTANT Washington and Islamabad hailed a trade deal last month, which Pakistan said would result in lower tariffs and increased investment. Pakistan's Commerce Minister Jam Kamal has said Islamabad will offer US businesses opportunities to invest in mining projects primarily in the southwestern Balochistan province through joint ventures with local companies, providing concessions such as lease grants. The province is home to key mining projects, including Reko Diq, run by mining firm Barrick Gold and believed to be one of the world's largest gold and copper mines. KEY QUOTES "We look forward to exploring new areas of economic cooperation, including critical minerals and hydrocarbons, and fostering dynamic business partnerships," Rubio said late on Wednesday. "The United States deeply appreciates Pakistan's engagement on counterterrorism and trade." CONTEXT Before President Donald Trump's administration, Islamabad's relationship with Washington had cooled in recent years, as the US drew closer to Pakistan's traditional adversary India to counter China's rise, among other factors. Washington also resented Islamabad over Afghanistan, especially under former President Joe Biden's administration, which oversaw a chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan and the takeover of the country by the Taliban insurgency that Washington accused Islamabad of backing. Pakistan denied the charge. In recent months, Washington's ties with Islamabad have improved. Trump took credit for a ceasefire between India and Pakistan after the Asian neighbors engaged in hostilities in May following an April attack in India-administered Kashmir. Pakistan praised Trump while India maintained that New Delhi and Islamabad should resolve their issues directly without outside involvement. COUNTERTERRORISM TALKS The US and Pakistan held the latest round of counterterrorism talks in Islamabad on Tuesday. Washington has designated separatist militant group Balochistan Liberation Army as a "foreign terrorist organization." "The US-Pakistan counterterrorism dialogue joint statement is one of the most positive and effusive I've seen from these two countries on CT for quite a few years," Michael Kugelman, a Washington-based South Asia analyst and writer for Foreign Policy magazine, said.


Arab News
8 hours ago
- Arab News
From Narnaul to Hyderabad: Pakistani recounts perilous journey from India in 1947
HYDERABAD, Pakistan: On a rain-soaked September night in 1947, ten-year-old Muhammad Saleem Pirzada was woken by his father and told to gather whatever valuables the family could carry. Outside, the streets of Narnaul — then part of the princely state of Patiala in present-day India — were dark, slick, and dangerous. The order was clear: leave, or risk certain death at the hands of armed Hindu and Sikh mobs that had already begun attacking Muslim neighborhoods. 'Walk barefoot and put a cloth in the children's mouths so they may not talk,' Pirzada recalls his father telling his mother as the family prepared to slip away in silence. That night, Sept. 8, Pirzada, his father, grandfather, four siblings and three other relatives walked more than two kilometers to the railway station. His mother would join them in Pakistan months later. 'It's natural, when a person is ill, near death, and then Allah grants them health, that moment of near-death comes back to mind. It was just like that, only Allah saved us.' Britain's hurried partition of the Subcontinent into India and Pakistan had triggered one of the largest migrations in human history. Around 15 million people were displaced along religious lines, and more than a million were killed in massacres and reprisals, according to independent estimates. In Narnaul, the violence began on Sept. 6, when mobs attacked Muslim homes. The next day brought more killings and looting. By the third day, the Pirzada family decided to leave, joining a crowd of terrified Muslims at the railway station. Sikh state police initially tried to stop them, but relented after the intervention of the British Railways' Watch and Ward force. 'We boarded from there and set off,' Pirzada says. Along the journey, the train stopped at stations where bodies lay scattered. 'We saw bodies, wounded people, some without limbs,' he remembers. The family eventually reached Hyderabad, in Pakistan's Sindh province, traveling via Munabao in the Indian state of Rajasthan. 'May Allah never let anyone see such a time.' Pirzada estimates that at least 80 members of his extended family were killed in those weeks. It was not always this way. Before 1947, he says, Narnaul was a place of deep communal trust. Hindus, Sikhs, and Muslims attended each other's weddings, and summer nights saw neighbors gathered together on charpoys. 'The Hindus would come and sit there [in the Muslim neighborhoods] at night in the summer… That's how relations were with the Hindus. They would attend our weddings,' he recalls. Sometimes Hindu fathers would even entrust Muslim traders to escort their daughters to their in-laws' homes. 'The Hindus would say, 'Mian ji, you are going there, take my daughter along.' I have seen those days of affection.' He still remembers the names of his Hindu schoolteachers, even as he acknowledges that the violence in Eastern Punjab was part of a larger cycle of retaliations. 'In Eastern Punjab, the atrocities were greater… the Muslims there were martyred,' he says, accusing the Maharaja of Patiala, Yadavindra Singh, of providing arms to Hindu and Sikh mobs. 'The riots took place at the instigation of the Maharaja of Patiala.' When asked whether his family would have migrated if peace had held, Pirzada is clear: 'There would be no question of coming [to Pakistan]. We had land, the crops were good, and life went on. Had we stayed there, we would have used new technology and increased production.' In Pakistan, Pirzada briefly worked as a clerk before his family received a land allotment in rural Hyderabad. Farming became his life's work, and today, at 88, he lives surrounded by his two sons, one daughter, and ten grandchildren. But more than seven decades later, Narnaul remains etched in his memory. 'One's homeland, the place of one's birth, is always remembered. The desire is still there. May Allah grant the opportunity so I can visit it once,' the said. 'We even saw some people who died in Pakistan insisting, 'No, no, we will go back! We will go back'!'


Arab News
10 hours ago
- Arab News
Mother arrested after allegedly killing her two children in case that stuns Pakistan
KARACHI: A Pakistani mother has been arrested in Karachi after allegedly killing her two young children amid a dispute with her ex-husband, in a case that has shocked the country, police said on Thursday. Child killings by mothers are rare in Pakistan. Experts say such incidents are often linked to mental health crises, family breakdowns, or domestic stress, underscoring the limited psychiatric and social support available for women facing marital disputes in the conservative South Asian nation. According to a police report, the victims were identified as Zarar, 8, and Samia, 4, who died at their home in Karachi's Defense Phase 6 area early on Thursday morning. Police said the mother was taken into custody at the scene and was being interrogated. The woman's former husband, Ghufran Khalid, told police she was 'mentally ill,' according to the statement. 'A lady namely Adeeba Ghufran w/o Ghufran has killed her two kids ... cut the necks with sharp knife of her kids due to divorce issue with her husband,' Deputy Inspector General (DIG) South Karachi Syed Asad Raza said in a text message to Arab News. He said the woman sent photographs of the children after the killing to her former husband, who then called the police helpline. SSP South Mahzor Ali told Arab News the couple divorced last September, followed by a custody battle in which the court granted custody to the father. The children lived with him but visited their mother several days a week. 'Last night [Aug. 13], the children came from their father's home to stay with their mother,' Ali said, adding that she allegedly killed them the next morning and then sent a video of the incident to her ex-husband, who immediately alerted police. A rescue team found the children dead with their throats slit, and the mother was taken into custody. He said the father would file a police complaint after burying the children. Research on cases where mothers kill their children, often described in criminology and psychology as filicide, points to multiple underlying causes. Studies suggest that such acts are most commonly linked to severe mental illness, including postpartum depression, psychosis, or untreated psychiatric conditions; extreme domestic stress such as custody battles or marital breakdowns; or situations of social and economic isolation. In some instances, mothers report distorted beliefs that killing their children is an act of protection from perceived future suffering. Experts caution that while these cases are rare, they often reveal gaps in mental health care and social support systems, particularly in societies where family breakdown carries stigma and couples have limited access to counselling or psychiatric treatment.