Nexus funds, arms and trains militants exploiting women and youth for bombings and anti-state acts
People and police officers gather after a blast near a railway track in Quetta, Pakistan, May 24, 2026. Picture taken with a mobile phone. REUTERS/Stringer
The banned Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) maintains a nexus with Al-Qaeda and Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), which continues to fuel terrorism, sabotage, and societal destabilisation across Balochistan and other parts of Pakistan.
This nexus provides funding, training, weapons, and logistical support, enabling the outfit to exploit vulnerable local women and youth as tools for suicide bombings and other anti-state activities.
Balochistan Chief Minister Mir Sarfraz Bugti and senior security officials have consistently pointed out that the BLA’s operational capabilities are significantly enhanced by this backing from Al-Qaeda and TTP, aimed at disrupting the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) and other national development projects.
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The government has repeatedly pointed out that Al-Qaeda and TTP act as the primary sponsors behind the BLA-TTP nexus, channelling support through Afghan territories to orchestrate attacks on civilians, infrastructure, and security forces.
Afghanistan remains a key sanctuary for BLA operatives, where training and planning occur before cross-border infiltration into Pakistan. This cross-border infrastructure enables the movement of facilitators, recruits, and suicide bombers.
The foreign-orchestrated network heavily relies on the systematic exploitation of Baloch women and girls. Security operations have repeatedly intercepted cases where vulnerable females are radicalised, trained, and deployed for suicide bombings.
In one such case in Khuzdar, security forces arrested Laiba (also known as Farzana), a would-be suicide bomber who was indoctrinated through a chain involving BLA-linked commanders and individuals such as Dr Sabiha, who target financially vulnerable girls via psychological manipulation and coercion. Laiba had been tasked with recruiting other young women for similar missions.
In another instance, Raheema Bibi’s confessional statement revealed how her husband facilitated a Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF)-linked female suicide bomber, Zarina Rafiq. The woman stayed at their residence before being sent to Afghanistan for training and later executed an attack on a Frontier Corps camp.
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Authorities in Sindh also foiled a plot involving a minor Baloch girl who was groomed through social media by BLA handlers for a suicide attack in Karachi. The girl later publicly warned that such practices violate Baloch cultural traditions that uphold the dignity and protection of women.
A structured model has been identified marking the ideological radicalisation through certain activist platforms, followed by BLA recruitment, training in Afghanistan, and operational deployment. When plans are disrupted, associated networks often shift to “missing persons” narratives to obscure militant linkages.
In collaboration with and TTP elements, along with Al-Qaeda, the BLA has carried out numerous attacks on security personnel, Chinese workers, schools, and economic infrastructure.
The security forces maintain intelligence-based operations supported by local communities, with a policy of zero tolerance for terrorism alongside rehabilitation and de-radicalisation programmes for misled individuals, especially women and youth.
The government has been constantly urging parents to monitor online activities, as social media serves as a primary vector for radicalisation, besides the officials calling for international action against states using proxies to destabilise Pakistan.
