On Monday, law enforcement quietly foiled an alarmingly audacious, deadly plot in Karachi, where the Balochistan Liberation Army had moved to recruit a minor schoolgirl into a suicide mission. The child was rescued before irreparable harm was done.
Across the length and breadth of the country, militants are mixing old grievances with new tactics, turning social media into a battlefield and impressionable minds into targets. This is no longer a conflict confined to remote mountains or isolated checkpoints. It is a multi-front war that now reaches into homes, classrooms and smartphones. Our forces track these digital trails, intercept the operatives at checkpoints, and work day in and day out to dismantle these cells. Still, even these efforts underline a harder truth that durable success depends not only on enforcement, but on a society alert to the dangers unfolding within its own walls.
Since 2018, separatist militant groups in Balochistan have increasingly adopted suicide tactics in their campaign against the state, with several high-profile attacks claimed by the BLA. The Majeed Brigade, a specialised unit that focuses on suicide missions, has been linked to these operations. In April 2022, a suicide bombing in Karachi near the University of Karachi’s Confucius Institute killed three Chinese teachers and their Pakistani driver. The attack, claimed by the BLA and carried out by a female bomber, Shari Baloch, shattered long-held assumptions about the movement’s methods and limits.
What makes this phase particularly dangerous is the speed with which radicalisation can now occur. Militants no longer rely solely on physical networks. Their shift to encrypted platforms has compressed the distance between recruitment and attack, leaving families and the state little margin for error. In the Karachi case, a mobile phone–hidden from family–became the primary instrument of grooming. That the plot was detected speaks to improved intelligence and surveillance capabilities, but it also underscores how close the country came to an unthinkable tragedy.
Force, however, cannot be the sole answer. Pakistan must fight this battle in courtrooms, classrooms and on airwaves as much as at checkpoints. The government’s demand that social media platforms curb militant propaganda is necessary. Parents need greater awareness of the digital worlds their children inhabit. In remote areas, community elders and clerics have a critical role in dismantling the moral fraud at the heart of militant narratives. No religion, tradition or grievance justifies the use of women or children as expendable weapons.
At the same time, it would be both unjust and counterproductive to conflate militancy with the Baloch population at large. The anger exploited by insurgent groups draws strength from decades of underdevelopment, political marginalisation and persistent disputes over resource-sharing. These grievances are real and corrosive. A sharper counterterrorism strategy that ignores them will only treat symptoms while leaving the disease untouched. *