Plot to coerce girl into carrying out terrorist attack in Islamabad thwarted, CM Bugti says

Published May 11, 2026 Updated May 11, 2026 03:48pm
Balochistan CM Sarfraz Bugti addresses a press conference on May 11, alongside a girl who was being prepared for a terrorist attack in Islamabad before the plot was thwarted by intelligence agencies. — DawnNewsTV
Balochistan CM Sarfraz Bugti addresses a press conference on May 11, alongside a girl who was being prepared for a terrorist attack in Islamabad before the plot was thwarted by intelligence agencies. — DawnNewsTV

Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti said on Monday that a plot to coerce a girl into carrying out a terrorist attack in Islamabad had been thwarted by intelligence agencies.

The girl, who was reportedly arrested before she could carry out a suicide bombing, will be released to her father under supervision instead of facing trial, he said.

The chief minister, in a press conference alongside the suspect, emphatically denounced the perpetrators of exploitation against Baloch women and girls. He stressed that their actions had no connection at all to Baloch tradition or history.

“We are faithful to our tradition,” he said, adding, “These people have no connection to Balochiyat, and the way they are using our women in this war is shameful. I am so ashamed that I cannot even tell the media the details.”

According to details shared by Bugti, the girl’s name had initially appeared on social media as a missing person, but an investigation by intelligence agencies ascertained that she was allegedly training at a terrorist camp.

Terming the investigation’s results as “very unfortunate”, Bugti noted that the method of exploitation by the terrorists involved “honeytrapping” women, then blackmailing them. In this case, by threatening to kill the girl’s father if she did not comply with their orders, the chief minister added.

“The plan was to perform a suicide attack in Islamabad,” the chief minister said.

He contended that the objective of the attack, which he alleged was orchestrated by agents of India’s intelligence agency Research and Analysis Wing (RAW), was to sabotage the improved reputation Pakistan was currently enjoying on the international stage.

The Balochistan CM said the girl perhaps did not know that Islamabad was the target and was to be told at the last minute, commending the intelligence agencies for foiling a major plan.

In addition, he stressed that the girl had been exploited in an egregious way and slammed those who were responsible for it, asking, “They would exploit their own Baloch girls? Their own daughters, their own sisters … and to please international masters? Can you conceive of it?”

“Then they say, ‘We are Baloch and these are Baloch traditions and a Baloch cause’ — there is no cause, no Balochiyat. It is a curse on this Balochiyat.”

Bugti said the girl’s story had caused him great pain and was a cause for shame, asserting that it showed the difference between the state and the terrorists: “I always say we should be opening doors to Oxford and Harvard for these girls, and they want to exploit them and put them in suicide jackets.”

He also denounced that the terrorists would proceed to upload video clips of such women and girls to social media as propaganda, calling it “heroism”, to recruit more women for their plans. He challenged the notion presented by the terrorists that women were “a part of this war”.

“Historically, Baloch women have never been a part of war. Historically, Baloch women have been a part of peace — when tribes fight, if a woman comes in between them, the fight ends. If a woman is there, her brother’s life is spared; if a woman is there, her father and son’s murders are called off … these were our traditions,” he noted.

“What kind of tradition has you exploiting girls for your vested interests like this? I do not have words to tell you the details,” the Balochistan CM remarked.

“We have decided that we are returning this girl to her father respectfully and with political and tribal guarantees,” Bugti said, adding that the father was a poor man.

“We have requested that he keep an eye on his daughter and, of course, our oversight will be present somewhere; we will watch them.”

He emphasised that they were releasing the girl because she was underage: “We could have tried her, but seeing the evidence of exploitation … I cannot sleep tonight.

“This is what they are doing to our Baloch daughters? To our Baloch sisters? They should be ashamed.”

The chief minister highlighted the “capacity and capability” of the intelligence agency that had saved Pakistan from losing face.

“So much destruction was going to happen; that was a given,” he noted. “But in Pakistan, if a woman carries out a suicide bombing … you can imagine its impact on Pakistan at this time, on an international level.”

Pakistan recorded a second consecutive month of improving security indicators in April 2026, with militant attacks and related casualties declining markedly, according to a report released by the Pakistan Institute for Conflict and Security Studies (PICSS).

According to the data, Balochistan also experienced a notable improvement, with militant attacks falling from 59 in March to 18 in April, a 69pc reduction.

In March, Bugti said security forces had arrested a “would-be” female suicide bomber in Khuzdar, with the help of “human intelligence”. At the time, he said the arrested woman would be interrogated in the “presence of female police personnel”, stressing that the state was cognisant of its responsibility to ensure that she suffered “no physical harm, moral harm or harassment”.

In December of last year, a major terror plot was thwarted in Karachi as law enforcers detained a teenage girl hailing from Balochistan, according to Sindh Home Minister Ziaul Hasan Lanjar.

Opinion

Editorial

New regional order
Updated 11 May, 2026

New regional order

The fact is that the US has only one true security commitment in the Middle East — Israel.
A better start
11 May, 2026

A better start

THE first 1,000 days of a child’s life often shape decades to come. In Pakistan, where chronic malnutrition has...
Widening gap
11 May, 2026

Widening gap

PAKISTAN’S monthly trade deficit ballooned to $4.07bn last month, its highest level since June 2022, further...
Momentary relief
Updated 10 May, 2026

Momentary relief

THE IMF’s approval of the latest review of Pakistan’s ongoing Fund programme comes at a moment of growing global...
India’s global shame
10 May, 2026

India’s global shame

INDIA’s rabid streak is at an all-time high. Prejudice is now an organised movement to erase religious freedoms ...
Aurat March restrictions
Updated 10 May, 2026

Aurat March restrictions

The message could not have been clearer: women may gather, but only if they remain politically harmless.