HomeWorldFrom checkpoints to ‘Jihad taxes’: How TTP has turned Khyber Pakhtunkhwa into a no-go zone for Pakistani Army

From checkpoints to ‘Jihad taxes’: How TTP has turned Khyber Pakhtunkhwa into a no-go zone for Pakistani Army

The insurgent network has effectively overrun large parts of the tribal belt along the Durand Line, transforming them into no-go zones for the Pakistan Army.

October 24, 2025 / 15:16 IST
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Pakistan’s security establishment is facing one of its biggest internal crises in years as vast areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK) slip from state control into the hands of the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and its allied militant factions. According to top intelligence sources cited by CNN-News18, the insurgent network has effectively overrun large parts of the tribal belt along the Durand Line, transforming them into no-go zones for the Pakistan Army.

The affected regions include the volatile districts adjoining Khyber, Kurram, North and South Waziristan, and Bajaur, where the Taliban-aligned groups have consolidated their control. Sources told CNN-News18 that TTP fighters now openly man checkpoints on several key routes such as the Peshawar–Khyber Road, the Hangu–Kurram corridor, and the Bannu–Dera Ismail Khan stretch leading toward Waziristan. Eyewitness accounts from locals describe militants stopping vehicles, inspecting ID cards, and forcibly collecting funds in the name of “jihad.”

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In a brazen show of dominance, the TTP’s media wing has circulated videos showing its fighters patrolling highways and interacting with civilians. Intelligence officials quoted by CNN-News18 called it “a symbolic and operational challenge to state authority,” underscoring the erosion of Pakistan’s control in its own frontier provinces.

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