Gulf News

Police claim to have foiled suicide attack

ARREST FOLLOWS SUICIDE BOMBING THAT KILLED 3 CHINESE NATIONALS

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Pakistani police arrested a would-be suicide bomber who planned to blow herself up near a convoy of Chinese nationals along the China Pakistan Economic-Corridor (CPEC), a police statement said.

Monday’s arrest came two weeks after a woman suicide bomber blew herself up on a university campus in the southern port city of Karachi, killing three Chinese teachers and their Pakistani driver.

Police arrested the militant in southweste­rn Balochista­n province that borders Afghanista­n and Iran, the statement said.

She belongs to the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which has started using women militants as suicide bombers, police said, a new phenomenon for counter-terrorism police who are more used to dealing with such attacks by Islamist militants.

Explosives recovered

“The woman wanted to target a convoy of Chinese nationals,” police said, adding the attack was planned along a route of China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Police recovered explosives and detonators from the woman and investigat­ed her, revealing her plans to target Chinese nationals. No other evidence was produced to support their accusation.

The Karachi suicide bomber was also a member of the BLA, the police statement said.

China is a close Pakistan ally and the CPEC is $65 billion-plus investment in infrastruc­ture in Pakistan, part of Beijing’s Belt and Road Initiative to seek road and sea trade routes to connect with the rest of the world.

Balochista­n is home to a deepwater port in Gwadar city, which Beijing is developing under the CPEC.

Baloch separatist guerrillas say they’ve been fighting for decades for a greater share in regional mine and mineral resources.

They attack gas plants, infrastruc­ture, security forces and Chinese interests, which they say amount to the occupation of their land and resources in the name of developmen­t.

Their attacks against Chinese nationals have since the fall of the Afghan capital to the Islamist Taliban in August last year.

The Taliban deny Pakistan’s accusation­s that the insurgents use Afghan soil to train the militants and plan the attacks.

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