Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

Suicide bomber kills nine soldiers in Pakistan

Army says a further five soldiers are injured in the attack near the town of Jani Khel

Suicide bomber kills nine soldiers in Pakistan

NINE soldiers were killed in a restive western region of Pakistan on Thursday (31) after a suicide bomber rammed his motorbike into their military convoy and detonated, the army and officials said.

Pakistan has witnessed a dramatic uptick in militancy since the Taliban returned to power in neighbouring Afghanistan two years ago, with attacks spiking along border regions.

A "motorcycle borne suicide bomber exploded himself" in Pakistan's Bannu district, 61 kilometres (38 miles) from the border, the army's media wing said.

The rugged border region has long been a hive of militant activity, with hardline organisations such as Pakistan's home-grown Taliban group, Tehreek–e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), using the largely unpoliced border to evade detection and stage assaults.

"The suicide bomber was riding a motorcycle and he rammed his bike into a truck in a military convoy," provincial minister Feroze Jamal Shah said.

Pakistan's army said a further five soldiers were injured in the attack near the town of Jani Khel, however Shah put the figure at 20.

Caretaker prime minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar called the incident "a cowardly terrorist act".

The TTP is the largest threat in the region and Islamabad has claimed its fighters are finding safe haven in Afghanistan.

In recent months, the group has waged a campaign against security officials, including police officers.

In January, a TTP-linked suicide bomber blew himself up in a mosque inside a police compound in the northwestern city of Peshawar, killing more than 80 officers.

The Daesh group has also been active in the country, claiming responsibility for a suicide bombing last month that killed at least 54 people, including 23 children, at a political party gathering.

Pakistan was once plagued by almost daily bombings, but a major military clearance operation in the former tribal areas starting in 2014 largely restored order.

The seven remote districts that border Afghanistan, of which Bannu is one, were later brought under the control of Pakistani authorities after the passage of legislation in 2018.

Analysts say militants in the former tribal areas have become emboldened since the return of Taliban authorities in Afghanistan.

Pakistan meanwhile is facing a worsening security situation, an economic downturn and political turmoil with elections for a new government due in the coming months, but no date yet formally announced.

(AFP)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

cervical -cancer-hpv-vaccine

HPV is the most common sexually transmitted infection

Photo for representation: iStock

HPV vaccine reduces cervical cancer deaths to near zero, study finds

Highlights

  • No women aged 20–24 died from cervical cancer in England between 2020 and 2024
  • HPV vaccination is estimated to have prevented nearly 200 deaths among young women
  • Study provides first direct evidence linking HPV vaccination to reduced cervical cancer mortality
  • Vaccine introduced for girls in 2008 in the UK
  • Researchers say higher vaccination uptake is needed to protect future gains

THE HPV vaccine for cervical cancer has reduced the risk of dying from the disease before the age of 30 in England to almost zero, the first study of its kind showed on Thursday (18).

Keep ReadingShow less