ISLAMABAD: Three people, including a soldier, were killed on Monday when “terrorists” attacked the vehicles of a private company in the northwestern Dera Ismail Khan district, the Pakistan Army said on Monday.
This is the second attack in six days on the Al-Haj Group, an emerging Pakistani conglomerate with an operational footprint spanning oil and gas exploration to textiles, metals, automobile manufacturing and supply chain and procurement. In the previous attack on the company last Tuesday, two policemen were killed and three were injured in a pre-dawn assault on the conglomerate’s offices in Dera Ismail Khan district.
A surge in militant attacks in Pakistan’s western provinces has cast a shadow on election preparations in the run-up to February’s national election, but until now the attacks had mostly targeted security forces.
Al-Haj group has not responded to Arab News requests for comment and it was unclear why militants are attacking the private company.
“In another incident in general area Darazinda, Dera Ismail Khan District, terrorists fired upon vehicles of a private company working on a development project in the area,” the army’s media wing said.
Two employees of the company were killed in the attack.
“Sepoy Syed Muhammad Shaheen Shah (age: 33 yrs, resident of: district Hangu), employed on the security of the project, having fought gallantly, also embraced Shahadat.”
This is the sixth attack to take place in Dera Ismail Khan in the last two weeks. On Nov. 5, heavily armed gunmen attacked police checkpoints in the district, injuring one policeman. On Nov. 3, seven people, including a security personnel, were killed in two separate attacks in the district.
Pakistani officials have frequently said militants targeting their country operate from neighboring Afghanistan. The Taliban administration rejects accusations it harbors militants.
Last week, in an unusually strongly-worded press conference, Pakistani Prime Minister Anwaar-ul-Haq Kakar demanded the Afghan Taliban hand over Pakistani militants belonging to the TTP group and dismantle their training centers and hideouts in Afghanistan.
Since the Taliban takeover of Kabul, “unfortunately there has been a 60 percent increase in terrorist attacks and a 500 percent rise in suicide attacks in Pakistan,” Kakar said, expressing regret over the lack of a “positive response” from the Taliban administration.