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8 Pakistani soldiers killed in Balochistan: Why the province is boiling again and what China has to do with it

In early July, 20 soldiers were killed in twin ambushes elsewhere in Balochistan, also involving disruption of communication systems and carefully coordinated strikes on convoys and posts.

August 04, 2025 / 15:24 IST
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File Photo - Police personnel set roadblocks as Pashtunknwa National Awami Party (PKNAP) members protest against the alleged rigging in Pakistan's national election results, near the provincial legislature of Pakistan's Balochistan Assembly during an oath taking ceremony of newly-elected members in Quetta on February 28, 2024. (Photo by Banaras KHAN / AFP)

A deadly militant assault on three Pakistani military outposts in Balochistan’s Panjgur district on Sunday night has once again thrown the spotlight on the simmering insurgency in the troubled province. The attack, which left eight soldiers dead and 11 others injured, was one of the most coordinated and deadly operations launched by suspected Baloch insurgents this year.

According to official sources, as quoted by CNN-News18, the attack unfolded late Sunday in the remote Gwargo area of Panjgur. More than 80 heavily armed militants arrived in a convoy of 11 vehicles and launched simultaneous attacks on three different military checkpoints. The attackers began by destroying communication infrastructure at the posts, severing the outposts’ link to reinforcements.

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With communications cut, the militants ambushed a quick response team that was sent to the scene, intensifying the toll. Three personnel remain unaccounted for, and a manhunt is underway in the mountainous, rugged terrain near the Iranian border.

While no group has formally claimed responsibility yet, the attack's tactics -- coordinated strikes, destruction of comms, use of decoys -- mirror those used in past assaults by Baloch separatist outfits like the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) and Baloch Raji Ajoi Sangar (BRAS).