QUETTA: Six laborers kidnapped last week by a separatist militant group from a remote district in southwestern Pakistan have been released and are in the custody of paramilitary forces, officials said on Thursday.
Gunmen attacked a dam construction site in Nushki district in Balochistan province and abducted the laborers on Nov. 30. The Balochistan Liberation Army, the most prominent of a number of separatist groups who operate in the province, claimed the kidnapping.
Pakistan’s largest but most sparsely populated province, Balochistan has seen a rise in deadly attacks in recent months in which both citizens and security forces have been targetted. The region borders Afghanistan and Iran and is home to a decades-long separatist insurgency by militants fighting for a separate homeland to win a larger share of benefits from the resource-rich province. The government and military deny they are exploiting the province’s mineral wealth or ignoring its economic development. The province is also home to key Chinese Belt and Road projects.
“Six abducted laborers who were working at the Gandari-II Dam construction site were released last night [Wednesday] by terrorists,” Amjad Sumroo, the deputy commissioner of Nushki, told Arab News.
“The Levies [paramilitary] force received a message from local tribesmen that the six abducted laborers had reached their villages last night,” he added. “The released laborers were then brought to the Levies Check Post in Zarain Jungle from where they were brought to the Levies Headquarters in Nushki for debriefing.”
The BLA has not yet issued any statement confirming the release of the laborers and no details are available on the circumstances of the release.
Earlier this month, Prime Minister Shahbaz Sharif approved a “comprehensive military operation” in Balochistan after a suicide bombing at railway station killed 25 people, including 19 army troops. In August, over 50 people including security officials were killed in a string of coordinated attacks across the province.
Baloch separatists have also stepped up attacks on Chinese workers and projects in Balochistan and elsewhere in the country, which has angered longtime ally Beijing and forced it to publicly call for better security arrangements by Islamabad.