The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) said on Friday that it carried out multiple attacks targeting Pakistani military personnel, supply vehicles and an alleged informant across Kolwah, Zamuran and Buleda areas of Balochistan, while announcing a “complete ban” on all supply deliveries to Pakistan army units in Zamuran.
In a media statement, BLA spokesperson Jeeyand Baloch said the group’s fighters used a remote-controlled improvised explosive device (IED) to target Pakistani soldiers on foot in the Dandar area of Kolwah. The explosion, he claimed, killed three personnel and injured others.
In Buleda, the BLA said its fighters killed an alleged “death-squad agent” identified as Dadin, son of Yalan. The group accused him of involvement in targeted killings, house raids and enforced disappearances, saying he was “neutralised” during the operation.
The statement added that in Zamuran’s Sabuni area, BLA fighters targeted a vehicle transporting rations and other materials for army units with a remote-controlled IED. The group said the blast severely damaged the vehicle, adding that its rear section was deliberately targeted “to minimise civilian casualties.”
The BLA said it had identified several private vehicle owners in Zamuran “collaborating out of greed” by delivering supplies to Pakistani military outposts. It declared a “strict and complete ban” on all such deliveries and warned that those who continued to assist the army “will bear full responsibility for their lives and property losses.”
The group said that while it had previously limited the intensity of its operations to avoid civilian harm, its fighters were now authorised to directly target vehicles or individuals involved in supplying Pakistani forces.
Meanwhile, the Balochistan Liberation Front (BLF) claimed responsibility for two separate attacks carried out in Mand and Surab.
In a statement, BLF spokesperson Major Gwahram Baloch said fighters attacked the Military Intelligence (MI) office in the Soro area of Mand on Thursday evening with rocket launchers, destroying a bunker and causing casualties.
The BLF said its fighters also set up a roadblock on the Karachi–Quetta highway in Bencha, Surab, where they conducted snap checking of vehicles. The group said a “settler” was taken into custody for interrogation, while seven construction workers detained at the site were later released.
Both the BLA and BLF said their operations would continue until the “complete withdrawal of enemy forces” and the “freedom of Balochistan.”
There was no immediate response from Pakistani authorities to the claims.




























