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RoP News }: 3 Pakistani border police killed in jihad suicide attack

duluxe

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Army personnel inspect the suicide attack site outside the border force headquarters in Peshawar, Pakistan, Nov. 24, 2025. (AFP Photo)

Army personnel inspect the suicide attack site outside the border force headquarters in Peshawar, Pakistan, Nov. 24, 2025. (AFP Photo)








At least three Pakistani paramilitary personnel were killed Monday when a suicide bombing struck a security headquarters in Peshawar, local officials said, marking the latest instance of deadly violence in the province bordering Afghanistan.

Witness Bilal Ahmed, a hospital employee, said he was on his way to work when he heard a "large blast" from the border force facility, located on one of the city's busiest routes and across the street from a shopping mall.







An Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporter saw body parts of a suspected bomber lying outside the main gate on Saddar Road, which was riddled with shrapnel holes. A single discarded black shoe was left nearby.

Rescue workers made their way through the scene, which was peppered with shattered glass from a vehicle.







One assailant detonated explosives at around 8:10 a.m. (03:10 a.m. GMT), just before rush hour, killing "three FC (Federal Constabulary) personnel deployed at the gate," said Peshawar police chief, Mian Saeed.

Security forces shot dead two other suspected attackers, Saeed said. Four people were wounded in the attack, he added.

Security personnel in high-visibility jackets cordoned off the road, while armed forces in camouflage began combing the area, AFP correspondents saw.

"The attack has concluded, and a clearance operation is underway to determine whether any unexploded ordnance is present," Zulfiqar Hameed, the police chief of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, told AFP.







The province, whose capital is Peshawar, borders Afghanistan and has seen repeated bouts of terrorist violence, which has intensified since the Taliban returned to power in Kabul in 2021.

Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned Monday's attack and said that "the perpetrators of this incident should be identified as soon as possible and brought to justice."

He also praised the "timely action" of security forces for averting greater loss of life.

"We will thwart the evil designs of terrorists who attack Pakistan's integrity," said Sharif.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but Pakistan's state-run broadcaster PTV reported that the assailants had been identified as Afghan nationals.

Border tensions

Pakistan has blamed previous attacks on terrorists, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which it claims operate from Afghan soil.

Kabul denies the charge, saying Islamabad must address its own security failings.

On Nov. 11, a suicide bomber killed 12 people outside a court building in the capital Islamabad, an attack Pakistan said was planned from Afghanistan. A faction of the Pakistani Taliban claimed that assault.

Relations between Pakistan and Afghanistan have sharply deteriorated in recent months.

Deadly cross-border clashes last month killed more than 70 people on both sides, in the South Asian neighbors' worst fighting in years.

The two countries agreed to a fragile cease-fire but failed to finalise its terms after several rounds of talks, each blaming the other for the impasse.
 
Islam would have dominated the world if not for these two things: rampant inbreeding, and Muslim on Muslim violence.

Nothing much has changed since the seventh century. It's their cult's DNA, no matter how much they try to downplay or sugarcoat it.
 
Pakistan and Afghanistan should simply merge. But that would mean the end of military power in Pakistan. And with it, US influence in the region.
 
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