Tragedy in Pakistan: Two Brothers Among 9 Shot Dead on Balochistan Road

Date:

Nine ethnic Punjabi bus passengers abducted and shot dead in Balochistan on N‑70 highway. President blames BLA. Similar attacks in 2024‑25 targeting migrants from Punjab. Government vows action.

Balochistan, Pakistan: At least nine passengers—all reportedly from Pakistan’s Punjab province—were abducted and shot dead after two buses travelling from Quetta to Punjab were stopped late Thursday night on the N‑70 highway in Balochistan’s Loralai and Zhob districts, officials confirmed.

According to Balochistan government spokesperson Shahid Rind, the attackers targeted individuals whose identity documents indicated they were from eastern Punjab. After being removed from the buses, the victims were taken a short distance away and executed—nine bodies were later recovered along the roadside with gunshot wounds .

The Azadi Times – Inline Article Block
Support Independent Journalism

Help us expose the truth

The Azadi Times is funded by readers like you. No corporate sponsors. No government influence. Just fearless reporting.

2,400+ supporters
Support $5/mo

Punjab’s district administrator in Dera Ghazi Khan, Ashfaq Chaudhry, said the assailants appeared to specifically target Punjabis. Law enforcement is conducting a manhunt for the perpetrators.

Who carried out the attack?

No group has officially claimed responsibility. However, President Asif Ali Zardari condemned the “brutal killing of passengers” and accused the banned Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) of orchestrating the attack to destabilise Pakistan.

The BLA, named in previous violent incidents across Balochistan—including mass shootings and a high-profile train hijacking in March that killed dozens—denied involvement. Instead, it claimed it was simultaneously engaged in an assault on a military camp far from the site of this attack.

Background and broader conflict

This incident bears disturbing resemblance to earlier ethnically targeted attacks, such as in August 2024 when BLA gunmen pulled passengers from vehicles on the same N‑70 highway, checked their identity cards, and executed at least 22 individuals—most of them from Punjab—before setting vehicles ablaze (BBC). In February 2025, the group claimed responsibility for killing seven more Punjabis in a similar roadside shooting in Barkhan district.

The N‑70 National Highway stretches over roughly 440 km between Multan and Qilla Saifullah, cutting across Punjab and Balochistan provinces. It is a frequent corridor for violence, especially targeting migrant labourers from Punjab travelling for seasonal or low-paid work in Balochistan’s resource-rich but unstable regions.

Efforts by the Pakistani state to suppress the insurgency—among other groups such as BLA and BLF—have failed to halt repeated attacks on civilians, security personnel, and foreign projects. The province remains an ongoing hotspot of ethnic and sectarian violence, state accusations of foreign support for insurgents notwithstanding.

Local reactions and government response

Commissioner Saadat Husain of the Loralai Division confirmed recovery of nine victims’ bodies. He stated that among them were two brothers, identified as Osman and Jaber, who were travelling with their father to attend the funeral rites of their deceased parent in Dunya Pur. They were shot along with other mourners in a targeted ethnic attack .

Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also issued a forceful condemnation, pledging a swift crackdown: “We will deal with the terrorists with full force, and the blood of innocent people will be avenged,” he stated .

Impact and outlook

Human rights groups have previously cautioned that ethnic targeting, extrajudicial killings, and unchecked militancy in Balochistan threaten to spiral into deeper civil conflict. Analysts warn that without political reconciliation and improved security measures, such cycles of violence may continue and radicalise further parts of Pakistan’s population.

https://azaditimes.com/wp-admin/options-general.php?page=ad-inserter.php#tab-6
Editorial Staff
Editorial Staffhttps://azaditimes.com
Our staff is composed of experienced journalists, writers, and researchers who are passionate about truth, transparency, and the power of independent media. Each member of our editorial staff brings unique insight and regional expertise, helping us cover a wide range of topics including politics, culture, environment, human rights, and youth affairs all while maintaining journalistic integrity and a commitment to factual reporting.
Azadi Times – Compact Patron Block
Editor's Note

The Truth They Hide

Do you want to know the truth that state-controlled media won't show you? Across the ceasefire line, millions of Kashmiri voices are being silenced. The Azadi Times brings those voices to you — powered by 2,400+ patrons who refuse to look away.

No Paywalls
Reader Funded
Award Winning
Join our Community From $5/month • Cancel anytime
Secure Payment
256-bit Encrypted

Related articles

Saudi Arabia Opens Aquarabia: The Middle East’s Largest Water Theme Park

Qiddiya City, Saudi Arabia — The turnstiles began turning at dawn on Thursday, April 23, 2026, as Aquarabia...

 365 U.S. Troops Wounded, 13 Dead in Iran War as Trump Issues 48-Hour Ultimatum

The Pentagon has published its first official tally for Operation Epic Fury, revealing that 365 U.S. troops have...

Beyond the Headlines: How the US-Israel War on Iran Is Reshaping the Middle East – Day 34

On the 34th day of the US-Israel war on Iran, the conflict has moved beyond military exchanges into...

World’s Best Airports 2026: Asian Hubs Dominate Global Rankings with Innovation and Passenger Experience

The World’s Best Airports 2026 rankings, based on global passenger experiences and voting, have once again highlighted the...