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Pakistan's Operation Shaban kills at least 104 militants in Balochistan in one week, using joint army, air, and police strikes against Fitna al-Khawarij

Pakistan's security forces reported killing at least 104 militants in Balochistan province since launching Operation Shaban on July 5, with the toll rising through joint Army, Frontier Corps, and police actions in air and ground operations against the banned Fitna al-Khawarij group; Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti described the wave of attacks as international conspiracies against Pakistan, and the government announced Rs 11 million in compensation for the family of each policeman killed

冲突· active 什么崩了·长远之局 ·6 视角 · ·rbtfl 更新 2026年7月12日
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报道分歧

同一条新闻,各国新闻编辑室如何讲述。引文均注明出处并链接原文。

Pakistan

Daily Pakistan (English)

“As a senior journalist who has tracked violence in Balochistan for years, I do not use the word decisive lightly.”

Pakistani national daily; editorial framing of the operation as a security turning point in Balochistan阅读原文 ↗

Pakistan

The Nation (Pakistan)

“CM Bugti calls recent terror wave in Balochistan international conspiracies against Pakistan.”

Pakistani English-language daily; adds political context and the official compensation announcement阅读原文 ↗

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Summary

Pakistan's security forces have killed at least 104 militants in Balochistan province since launching Operation Shaban on July 5, with the toll rising steadily through coordinated Army, Frontier Corps, and police actions combining air strikes and ground sweeps. The operation targets the banned Fitna al-Khawarij group, which the Pakistani military has described as a proxy force. Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti publicly attributed the campaign of attacks to "international conspiracies against Pakistan," and the government announced Rs 11 million in compensation for each officer's family.

Why it matters

Balochistan is Pakistan's largest province by area and borders both Iran and Afghanistan. The rapid escalation in the reported kill toll, from 75 to 104 in under 24 hours, reflects either an intensification of the operation or changed reporting norms, and neither interpretation is routine.

What to watch

  • Whether the toll continues to climb and how the operation's end is eventually defined
  • Any independent reporting from inside Balochistan on civilian displacement or impact
  • Pakistan's government presenting evidence for its claim of external backing of the group

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