Latest News

Seven bus passengers killed by gunmen in Southwest Pakistan

Seven bus passengers killed by gunmen in Southwest Pakistan

Officials said that seven people were killed by unknown gunmen on a bus bound for Lahore in the Balochistan Province of southwestern Pakistan after they forced them to leave and checked their identification documents late Tuesday.

Balochistan is Pakistan's key battleground against separatists who are fighting for greater autonomy and to gain a share in the natural resources of the region.

Recent months have seen a rise in attacks against security forces, Chinese projects for infrastructure and workers from the richer central Punjab Province, whom militants accuse of exploiting Baloch resource.

Waqar Khurshid alam, a senior government official, said that the group of 40 men pulled seven passengers from a bus in Balochistan’s Barkhan District, checked their national identification cards, and then shot them.

Alam stated that all seven victims were Punjabi.

In a video, a woman in the Punjabi city of Faisalabad said: "Armed men dragged [my elder brother] from the bus when they checked his ID card. But they didn't do anything with us."

The motive for the attacks was not clear. Officials said that the area was cordoned off, but that the attackers had managed to escape.

Shehbaz Shaif, Pakistan's prime minister, said that the gunmen will be brought to trial.

Sharif made a statement that said, "Those who damage the lives and properties of innocent citizens will pay a heavy cost."

The murders remind us of the roadside attack that took place in August, when 23 people were killed by armed men who had checked passenger IDs before setting fire to their vehicles.

The attack on the school was part of an ongoing campaign to

Wave of Violence

Separatist militants have targeted police stations, infrastructure and civilians in Balochistan. At least 73 were killed.

This operation was carried out by the Baloch Liberation Army, the largest of the ethnic groups fighting the central government. It called it "Haruf", or "dark windsy storm".

A bomb that targeted a coal mining vehicle on Friday killed or injured at least eleven people. No group has claimed to be responsible.

Baloch Liberation Front (another separatist group) said that it has carried out eight separate attacks against security forces over the last week but not on coal miners.

Insurgent groups also target Chinese nationals in Balochistan.

China is also developing Gwadar, a deep-water seaport in the province.

Beijing has made a significant investment in regional development as part of its $65 billion commitment to the Belt and Road Initiative's China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. Saleem Ahmad, Asif Shahzad and Ariba Sayeed contributed to the report. Kate Mayberry edited.

(source: Reuters)