HomeNewsOpinionPakistan: TTP’s ambitions grow in Balochistan. Will it hit China’s CPEC?

Pakistan: TTP’s ambitions grow in Balochistan. Will it hit China’s CPEC?

Pakistan’s troubles in Balochistan are now being compounded by the incursions of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan. The TTP is now reaching out beyond the Pashtun-majority parts of the province to those areas dominated by the Balochs, though they have so far remained cold to the terror group’s overtures

July 18, 2023 / 16:12 IST
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The security of CPEC is the responsibility of the Pakistan military, which has set up two special security infantry divisions to protect its assets, personnel, and newly created infrastructure.

In the early hours of July 12 morning, seven heavily armed terrorists belonging to the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) sneaked into Zhob Cantonment in Balochistan where surprised security forces tried to contain the intrusion. The Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) press release No PR-95/2023-ISPR admitted the same day that nine security personnel were killed and five militants neutralised after a prolonged encounter. Two militants were still on the run.

Balochistan’s New Insurgency

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Carried out in the name of a new outfit, Tehreek-i-Jihad Pakistan (TJP), this is one in a string of attacks by the TTP, targeting security forces in northern Balochistan, hitherto relatively free of militancy. It has to be seen as a separate phenomenon from the insurgency that plagues Baloch-majority areas of the province.

Located 338 kms northeast of Quetta, Zhob town lies east of river Zhob, 4,678 feet above sea level, flanked by the Suleiman range in the North. Earlier known as Fort Sandeman, which was constructed in 1890, it was named after Robert Sandeman, a highly regarded British colonial administrator who worked for long years in Balochistan. He was the architect of the “Levies” system, which first recruited local tribes to assist the British Indian Army. It was renamed “Zhob” in 1976 by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.