KARACHI: Additional Inspector General Sindh (AIG) Ghulam Qadir Thebo on Tuesday said 119 police officers and personnel have become victims of targeted attacks in Karachi this year alone.

Addressing a press conference at the Central Police Office, Thebo said morale remained high among police personnel despite the obstacles faced by them on a day-to-day basis.

He further stated that a number of people in Karachi were using weapons for illegal activities, adding that the police was continually carrying out raids across the metropolis without any regard for political affiliations of suspected individuals.

AIG Thebo said there were 200,000 foreigners residing in the city with no legal documentation and no records of these individuals were available with the government.

He told reporters that police apprehended two target killers and nine extortionists and 139 weapons were seized from their possession.

The AIG moreover declared that the city’s law and order situation had been improving gradually.

Karachi, the country’s financial capital, is prone to targeted killings — political as well as sectarian — and terrorism. The deterioration in the city’s law and order situation had also been noticed by the Supreme Court which has been hearing a case relating to security in the metropolis.

Just last week, Director General Sindh Rangers Maj-Gen Rizwan Akhter had informed the apex court that around 19,000 shipping containers with weapons had gone missing during the tenure of the former minister for ports and shipping.

Akhtar had moreover claimed that these smuggled weapons were being used by militant and criminal elements in Waziristan, Balochistan and Sindh.

Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has also scheduled a special cabinet meeting for September 4, aimed at finding a solution to the deteriorating security situation in the provincial capital.

The meeting will be attended by the Sindh chief secretary, provincial chiefs of security as well as the directors general of Rangers, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Intelligence Bureau (IB).

Opinion

Editorial

JAAC ban
Updated 07 Jun, 2026

JAAC ban

Though the JAAC’s demands are open to scrutiny, banning any political organisation — as long as it remains committed to peaceful activism — is undemocratic.
GB election
Updated 07 Jun, 2026

GB election

It is important that whichever party ultimately forms the government puts the needs of the people of GB above everything else.
ODI win
07 Jun, 2026

ODI win

AT last, the Pakistan cricket team had something to celebrate: a One-day International series victory against...
Trump rebuked
Updated 06 Jun, 2026

Trump rebuked

OBSERVERS across the world have long questioned the utility of Donald Trump’s now three-month-old war on Iran. But...
Hostile water motives
06 Jun, 2026

Hostile water motives

INDIA’S latest move to advance the Chenab-Beas Link Tunnel Project and its plan to flush silt from the Salal Dam...
Polio progress
06 Jun, 2026

Polio progress

PAKISTAN’S latest sub-national polio campaign offers encouraging evidence that the country can still push back...