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Pakistan sends helicopters, drones to end desert standoff; 58 dead

Police said that Pakistani security forces used drones and helicopters after a three-day fight to take control of a town in the southwest from separatists. The death toll for?the violence at the weekend? grew to 58.

The Baloch Liberation Army's coordinated wave of attacks on Saturday brought Pakistan's biggest province to a standstill. Security forces and insurgents exchanged fire in over a dozen locations, killing 197 insurgents.

Robina Ali said, "I thought my roof and walls were going to explode," a housewife who lives near the administrative building of the fortified capital of Quetta. A powerful morning blast shook the area.

In one of their biggest operations, BLA fighters, the strongest insurgents in the region, attacked schools, banks and markets in Balochistan, killing 36 civilians and more than 22 officials.

Officials from the police gave details about the situation under the condition of anonymity, as they weren't authorised to talk to the media.

In the desert city of?Nushki (population 50,000), the insurgents?seized the control of the police and other security facilities, triggering a 3-day standoff.

Seven officers were reported dead by the police in the battles that took place before the town was retaken late Monday night. Meanwhile, operations against BLA are continuing elsewhere in the province.

One official confirmed that more troops had been sent to Nushki. "Helicopters, drones, and other weapons were used to combat the militants."

The Pakistani interior ministry didn't immediately respond to a comment request.

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Balochistan is Pakistan's poorest and largest province. It borders Iran and Afghanistan, and Beijing has invested in Gwadar's deepwater port and other projects.

It has been battling a decade-long insurgency, led by ethnic Baloch secessionists who want greater autonomy and?a bigger share of its natural resource.

The BLA has asked the people of the province for their support and said that it killed 280 soldiers in its Operation "Herof", Black Storm. However, the BLA did not provide any evidence.

Security officials said the weekend attacks began on Saturday at 4 am with suicide bombings in Nushki, the fishing port of Pasni, and gun and grenade attacks across 11 other places including Quetta.

Police officials reported that the insurgents had seized six district administration offices and were at one time within 1 km (3300 ft), of the office of the provincial chief Minister in Quetta. Saleem Ahmad in Quetta, Asif Shahzad from Islamabad and Clarence Fernandez editing the report.

(source: Reuters)