In KP’s Bajaur, the Afghan Taliban attacked and killed four civilians.

The Afghan Taliban regime intentionally targeted civilians in Tabesta Letai, Salarzai area of Bajaur District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, with artillery and mortar fire from across the border, according to Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting Attaullah Tarar.
The minister claimed in a post on his X Twitter that a five-year-old child was gravely hurt when a house was struck in this attack, while four innocent citizens accepted martyrdom.
The four martyrs, Sajid, Ayaz, Riaz, and Muaz, he claimed, were indeed brothers.
Due of this assault, the Afghan Taliban regime has been strongly condemned and angered by the local populace.
In addition to being a flagrant breach of international law and fundamental human principles, he claimed that the Afghan Taliban regime’s despicable and horrible premeditated targeting of people in collaboration with the terrorist group Fitna-al-Khawarij is also a reflection of their intense anger and desperation.
According to the minister, the infrastructure and positions of the Afghan Taliban government in charge of this conduct are receiving an appropriate and forceful response.
According to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the security forces killed five terrorists connected to the India-backed outfit Fitna-e-Hindustan earlier in Lakki Marwat during an intelligence-driven operation.
According to the ISPR statement, terrorists whose presence had been reported in the region were the objective of the operation.
The five militants supported by India were eliminated by security troops after a fierce gunfight.
A sizable cache of guns and ammunition was found in the militants’ hiding places, and officials established that the dead militants were involved in numerous terrorist acts in the area.
Clearance operations would continue to eradicate any extremists in the region who are still supported by India, the ISPR added.
The program is a component of the continuous effort to eradicate terrorism from the nation.