On Saturday, Balochistan’s home department officials stood before cameras and described an insurgency no longer confined to distant mountains or barren crossing points. Militants entering Pakistan from across the border, carrying out attacks and slipping back into Afghanistan, have long been an enduring Achilles’ heel, now compounded by the exploitation of women and children. The account was chilling because it narrowed the distance between the battlefield and ordinary households. Rahima Bibi, a woman from Dalbandin, said her husband used her phone to coordinate with militants, hosted a female bomber at their home and then took her to Afghanistan for training before the attacker was later used in the assault on an FC camp last November. Tragic, though consistent with a pattern of sustained militant activity aimed at destabilising Pakistan.
The broader pattern is already visible. In February, an international media report noted that three suicide bombers were among six women involved in January’s coordinated attacks in Balochistan that killed 58 people. Before those attacks, five women suicide bombers had already been documented, while analysts and officials describe the shift as both strategic and psychological, designed to widen the insurgency’s reach and signal that the fight has entered the home itself.
The harder question is why these networks are able to draw in women at all. Officials point to coercion, manipulation and organised recruitment. Not entirely speculative, given how narrative ecosystems–especially online–can influence vulnerable individuals and create pathways for recruitment. Still, Balochistan’s underlying reality cannot be ignored. It remains Pakistan’s poorest province, and extremist organisations have long fed on exclusion, grief and institutional absence. The response, then, requires sharper policing, stronger intelligence and legal protection for those coerced into these pipelines. It also requires a state presence that reaches people before recruiters do.
Cross-border dynamics deepen the crisis. Pakistan has for years demanded that Kabul dismantle militant sanctuaries and training camps. Had the Taliban regime acted decisively against TTP infrastructure and denied militants the space to plan attacks and evade capture, Pakistan would not be as deeply engaged on the Afghan front as it is today. Kabul has yet to demonstrate, in word or in deed, that it fully grasps the gravity of cross-border militancy. That failure carries consequences far beyond one border district or one province. The TTP alone launched 600 attacks inside Pakistan in 2025, and officials believe overlapping networks continue to collaborate, sharing resources and moving fighters across the border.
The exploitation of women and children demands a response anchored in both security and law. Law-enforcement agencies are doing painstaking work to trace recruitment patterns and intercept plots that often surface only when something goes wrong. It is a thankless burden. It is also not enough on its own. Parliament must move to criminalise the coercion of women and minors into militant activity and create pathways for those trapped in these networks to step out. *