ISLAMABAD: Pakistan's security forces on Thursday killed 11 militants and foiled a "high profile terrorist activity" in South Waziristan, the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) said.
Pakistani militants have stepped up attacks on security forces ever since a fragile truce between the state and Pakistani Taliban (TTP) broke down last year. Pakistan has warned militants of its "zero-tolerance" policy for attacks and has vowed to eliminate groups who have taken up arms against the state.
The TTP was at its strongest in the 2000s and took control of parts of what is now Pakistan’s northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in 2007. During that time, militants unleashed a reign of terror, killing and beheading politicians, singers, soldiers and opponents. They banned female education and destroyed almost 200 girls’ schools.
The surge in militant attacks has caused fears that Pakistan may return to militancy and bloodshed. Last week, three Pakistani soldiers and two militants were killed in a gunbattle in the country's northwestern Kurram Agency. In December 2021, several militants were killed after Pakistan Army commandos rescued hostages and retook a counterterrorism facility in Bannu that had fallen to Pakistani Taliban detainees.
The ISPR said Thursday's gunbattle between militants and security forces took place in Wana, South Waziristan District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. It added that two suicide bombers were also killed in the exchange.
"During intense exchange of fire, 11 terrorists including Terrorist Commander Hafiz Ullah alias Tor Hafiz and 2 suicide bombers, were killed," the military's media wing said. "A huge quantity of weapons and ammunition was also recovered from the killed terrorists."
The ISPR said the slain militants were "actively involved in terrorist activities" against security forces and had killed police officers in the tribal district.