ISLAMABAD: Over 1,000 Pakistanis, including 260 officers and soldiers of Pakistan’s Armed Forces lost their lives in several “terrorist” attacks this year, the state-run Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) said this week in a report, as the South Asian country continues to grapple with a surge in militancy.
This year was marked by a surge in unrest in Pakistan’s western regions bordering Afghanistan as resurgent militants carried out attacks in the country’s Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces that border Afghanistan.
As per Islamabad-based think tank Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS), Pakistan witnessed the highest number of suicide attacks this year since 2014.
“Pakistan Armed Forces, other law enforcement agencies, and people have made selfless sacrifices in the war against terrorism,” the APP said.
“More than 1,000 people, including more than 260 officers and soldiers of the Pakistan Army, sacrificed their lives for the sake of the country in the terrorist attacks,” it added, citing data available with it as the source for the figures.
The report said Pakistani security forces conducted 18,736 intelligence-based operations (IBOs) this year in which 566 “terrorists” were killed and 5,161 were arrested.
The most IBOs in 2023 took place in Balochistan, the state-run media said.
“15,063 intelligence-based operations were conducted in Balochistan and 109 terrorists were sent to hell,” the report said. “Some 1,942 intelligence-based operations were conducted in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa while 447 terrorists were sent to hell.”
Meanwhile,190 IBOs were conducted in Pakistan’s most populous Punjab province while only 14 took place in the northern mountainous Gilgit-Baltistan region, and 1,987 in Pakistan’s southern Sindh province.
The report said that as per the data available with the APP, traces and evidence of “recent terrorist incidents” were linked to “terrorist sanctuaries” in Afghanistan.
“In the coming year, the security forces, together with the law enforcement agencies, will continue the war against terrorism with a new dimension and determination,” the report added.
The surge in militancy this year has also dented Islamabad’s ties with Kabul as it urges the Afghan Taliban administration to rein in militants Pakistan says launch attacks from Afghan soil.
Afghanistan has rejected Pakistan’s allegations and repeatedly assured its neighbor it will not let militants use its soil to attack any country.