The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) has claimed responsibility for a series of coordinated attacks across Balochistan, including the seizure of a Levies post in Hoshab, an IED blast on a military convoy in Zamuran, and the destruction of construction equipment in Kalat.
In a statement released to the media, BLA spokesperson Jeeyand Baloch said the operations were part of the group’s ongoing campaign targeting Pakistani military forces and state-backed infrastructure linked to “exploitative projects.”
According to the BLA, its fighters took control of the Levies station at Gowandsarin in the Hoshab area of Kech district during a nighttime operation on Friday. All personnel present at the station were reportedly taken into custody. Simultaneously, another BLA unit established checkpoints along the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) route, maintaining a blockade for several hours.
The spokesperson said Pakistani forces deployed a quadcopter during the confrontation, which was shot down by BLA fighters. He added that an advancing military convoy was ambushed, with one vehicle hit and four personnel killed. Several others were injured.
In a separate operation in Zamuran, the BLA said its fighters destroyed a military supply truck using a remote-controlled improvised explosive device (IED). The vehicle was reportedly transporting materials for security forces operating in the region.
The BLA also claimed responsibility for sabotaging heavy construction machinery belonging to a company working near Zard Abdullah in the Manguchar area of Kalat. The group described the company as being involved in “colonial plunder.”
These operations come amid an intensifying armed campaign by the Baloch Liberation Army. According to a recent infographic report released by Hakkal, the group’s official media cell, the BLA carried out 284 attacks in the first six months of 2025 alone.
The group claimed these operations resulted in the deaths of more than 668 Pakistani soldiers and 58 informants, along with 290 arrests, 121 bombings, and the destruction of 131 vehicles.
In the report, the BLA stated it had carried out nine “special operations,” including three “fidayeen,” or suicide-style, attacks. It also claimed to have seized control of more than 45 locations and destroyed 17 military installations during the same six-month period.
The BLA warned that its armed resistance will continue with “greater intensity and strategic planning,” vowing to render Balochistan “no longer a safe front for the occupying state.”




























