Pakistan police book separatist BLA’s leadership for suicide attack targeting Chinese nationals 

Firefighters work on the site of an explosion which occured near Karachi airport in Karachi, on late October 6, 2024. (AFP)
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  • BLA claimed responsibility for Karachi blast that killed three, including two Chinese nationals, on Sunday night
  • BLA leadership planned attack to damage Pakistan’s ties with China, harm national security, says complaint 

KARACHI: Pakistani police this week registered a case against the leadership of the separatist Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) militant group for being involved in a suicide attack that targeting Chinese nationals in Karachi, saying that the attack was intended to damage Islamabad’s ties with Beijing. 
Three people, including two Chinese nationals, were killed while 10 others were injured on Sunday night in a blast near the Jinnah International Airport in Karachi. The BLA had claimed responsibility for the attack, saying it had used a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED) to target the Chinese citizens. 
According to a copy of the First Information Report (FIR) filed by Inspector Kaleem Khan Moosa of the Airport Police Station, police said BLA chief Bashir Ahmed Baloch and other leaders of the outfit had planned the attack to undermine Pakistan’s ties with China. The complaint confirmed that a VBIED was used to target the Chinese nationals. 
“An unidentified terrorist brought his Toyota Hilux vehicle very close to the convoy,” the copy of the FIR obtained by Arab News on Wednesday, said. 
“He detonated his vehicle in a suicide attack, resulting in the destruction of the convoy vehicles carrying foreign Chinese and other security officials, including Rangers, police, and other nearby vehicles, leading to casualties and injuries.”
Multiple sections of the Anti-Terrorism Act, Explosive Substance Act and Pakistan Penal Code were included in the FIR. It said the BLA leaders had planned the attack with help from accomplices with “the intent of instigating terrorism in the country.” 
“They allegedly brainwashed the unknown suicide bomber,” the FIR said, adding that the group had possibly obtained the “assistance of a foreign enemy intelligence agency.”
“Their goal was to undermine the relations between Pakistan and China, affect national security through economic disruption, and achieve financial benefits for their banned organization while instilling a sense of insecurity among the public and diminishing the morale of national security institutions,” it said. 
The complaint said that the suicide bomber was driving a vehicle with the number plate KW0375. As per the Excise and Taxation department’s records seen by Arab News, the vehicle is registered under the name of Shah Fahad, who the BLA claimed was responsible for carrying out the attack.
BLA ATTACKS ON CHINESE NATIONALS
Sunday night’s attack was the latest by the BLA, the most prominent of a number of separatist groups fighting for independence for Pakistan’s gas-and-mineral-rich Balochistan province, where a low-lying insurgency has been ongoing for the past two decades. 
Baloch militants blame Pakistan’s state for exploiting the province’s resources, a charge the Pakistani state denies. The BLA also accuses Beijing of helping Islamabad exploit the province and has attacked Chinese interests and projects in the past, in particular the strategic port of Gwadar on the Arabian Sea. It has previously killed Chinese citizens working in the region and attacked Beijing’s consulate in Karachi. 
China is a major ally and investor in Pakistan, having pledged over $65 billion in road, infrastructure, and development projects under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project. 

BLA carried out its first suicide attack on a convoy of Chinese engineers in Dalbandin on August 11, 2018, by its suicide bomber Rehan Aslam Baloch.
In March this year, a suicide bombing killed five Chinese engineers and a Pakistani driver in northwestern Pakistan as they headed to the Dasu Dam, the biggest hydropower project in the country. In 2022, three Chinese educators and their Pakistani driver were killed when an explosion ripped through a van at the University of Karachi.
Sunday’s airport attack followed a deadly day of coordinated attacks in August, most claimed by the BLA, that killed more than 50 people in Balochistan and which Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and other leaders had said sought to harm Chinese-funded investment and development projects.