ISLAMABAD: The Pakistani army said on Friday it had killed three militants in a clearance operation in southwestern Balochistan province, following twin attacks on paramilitary camps in the Naushki and Panjgur districts earlier this week.
Pakistani troops battled separatists in Balochistan province for a third day on Friday, with a security official saying militants timed their assaults to derail Prime Minister Imran Khan's visit to China.
Late Wednesday, militants from the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) killed seven Pakistani troops in twin assaults in the Naushki and Panjgur districts, according to the Pakistani military.
The Naushki assault was quashed on Thursday, but a senior security official said Friday an operation was still underway in Panjgur. At least 16 militants have been killed so far.
The official told AFP news agency the attacks were timed to "malign Pakistan" during Prime Minister Imran Khan's ongoing visit to China, which has invested billions of dollars in infrastructure projects along an economic corridor linking China's far-western Xinjiang region with the strategic port of Gwadar in Balochistan.
"Three terrorists killed, including two high-value targets at Balgatar, Kech in a follow-up clearance operation conducted on a makeshift terrorist hideout linked with recent terrorist activities in Panjgur," the Pakistani military's media wing, the Inter-Services Public Relation (ISPR), said in a statement.
"The terrorist hideout was surrounded on a major intelligence tip-off. Security forces encircled the well dug-out terrorists and in intense exchange of fire killed all three terrorists hiding there."
The ISPR said the deceased militants included Summair alias Bahar, Altaf alias Lalik and Phailan Baloch, who was involved in attacks on security forces in Panjgur, Hoshab and other areas.
Baloch separatists have waged an insurgency in the vast southwestern province for years, fueled by anger that its abundant reserves of natural resources are not relieving citizens from crushing poverty.
The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project has inflamed grievances, with claims the vast influx of investment does not benefit locals.
Separatist militants have frequently targeted Chinese interests, and while the economic corridor offers a lucrative gateway for China to the Indian Ocean, the security of its workers has long been a concern.
The BLA says it has killed 170 Pakistan soldiers in the twin assaults, a claim authorities dismissed as "totally false".
Baloch separatists frequently exaggerate their battlefield successes, while the Pakistan military's public relations department also plays down losses, or delays reporting them.
On Friday, the BLA said it still held a security camp in Panjgur, 40 hours after the initial assault.
But the Pakistan security official insisted the situation was "well under control", and that the ongoing operation was only "to hunt down the remnants" from the attack.