Balochistan train blast kills 24, injures 70
Quick Look
- A bomb blast on a shuttle train carrying Pakistani security personnel and their families in Balochistan killed at least 24 people and injured around 70.
- The Baloch Liberation Army claimed responsibility for the attack, describing it as a suicide bombing.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
The attack is the latest in a series of strikes on trains, security forces, and infrastructure in the mineral-rich Balochistan province, which borders Iran and Afghanistan. Pakistan has launched counterinsurgency operations in the province.
An explosion that hit a shuttle train carrying Pakistani security personnel and their families has killed at least 24 people and injured around 70, local officials say.
The attack is the latest in a series of strikes on trains, security forces and infrastructure in the Balochistan province.
Separatist militant group Baloch Liberation Army says it is behind the attack.
A bomb blast has hit a shuttle train carrying Pakistani security personnel and their families in the country's south-west, officials say, in the latest major attack claimed by separatist militants.
The explosion in the province of Balochistan on Sunday killed at least 24 people and injured around 70, according to three provincial government and security officials speaking to Reuters.
The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity as they are not authorised to speak to the media.
The attack was the latest in a series of strikes on trains, security forces and infrastructure in the mineral-rich province that borders Iran and Afghanistan.
Pakistan has launched counterinsurgency operations in the province after some of the deadliest violence in years.
The separatist militant group Baloch Liberation Army, or BLA, said in a statement to the media that it carried out the attack and described it as a suicide bombing. Reuters could not independently verify the claim.
The shuttle train was carrying passengers from Quetta's cantonment area to connect with the Jaffar Express long-distance train when the blast struck near a railway track in the provincial capital, Pakistan's railways ministry said in a statement.
The explosion derailed the engine and three coaches, while two coaches overturned, the ministry said, adding that security forces had cordoned off the area and rescue operations were underway.
A security official said an explosives-laden vehicle hit one of the train's bogies in a residential area, and that some of those killed were residents of a nearby apartment building.
Images from the scene showed burnt-out vehicles, damaged residential buildings, twisted metal and debris scattered near the railway track, with smoke rising from the wreckage.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif condemned what he called a "heinous bomb explosion" in a post on social media website X. He expressed condolences for the victims' families and said the nation stood with the people of Balochistan.
In March 2025, BLA militants hijacked the Jaffar Express train, taking hundreds hostage before a military operation ended the day-long stand-off. The military said 21 hostages, four troops and all 33 attackers were killed.
Earlier this year, Pakistani forces killed 145 militants in a 40-hour operation after coordinated attacks across Balochistan left nearly 50 people dead, provincial officials said.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Increased security measures and counterinsurgency operations in Balochistan.
Very likely · Within weeks
Further attacks by the Baloch Liberation Army.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- What specific security failures allowed the attack to occur?
- What are the immediate next steps in Pakistan's counterinsurgency operations?
- Will this attack lead to increased international scrutiny of the conflict in Balochistan?
- What is the BLA's stated objective beyond claiming responsibility?



