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Pakistan security officials at the scene of the attack on the consulate in Karachi. Photo: EPA-EFE

‘Mastermind’ behind fatal attack on Chinese consulate in Pakistan killed

  • Baloch Liberation Army says commander Aslam Baloch and five others were killed
  • Pakistan television station reports that separatists were killed in suicide attack across the border in Afghanistan
Pakistan

One of the alleged masterminds of an attack by a Pakistani separatist group on the Chinese consulate in Karachi last month has been killed along with five associates, the insurgent group said on Wednesday.

The Baloch Liberation Army, which opposes projects linked to China’s “Belt and Road Initiative” in resource-rich Balochistan, issued a statement on Tuesday confirming the death of Aslam Baloch, one of its leaders.

“The important BLA commander Aslam Baloch, along with five associates in the organisation were martyred in an enemy attack on Monday,” Jiand Baloch, a spokesman for the separatist group said in a statement that gave no further details.

Pakistan’s Samaa Television reported that Aslam was killed along with a number of his commanders in a suicide attack in Aino Maina in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, across the border from Baluchistan.

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There was no claim of responsibility for the killings and a spokesman for the Pakistani foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment.

Last month, three attackers stormed the Chinese consulate in Karachi, killing four people. Security forces killed the three attackers who were carrying explosives.

Pakistan has long accused its old rival India of supporting insurgents in Balochistan. India denies helping Baluchistan insurgents and accuses Pakistan of nurturing Islamist militants throughout the region.

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China has funded development of a deep water port at Gwadar in south Balochistan, and is also investing in other projects as part of the giant China Pakistan Economic Corridor.

Baluchistan, on the borders of Afghanistan and Iran, has rich mineral and natural gas reserves but is Pakistan’s poorest province.

Separatists have for decades campaigned against what they see as the unfair exploitation of resources, in particular natural gas and minerals.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Leader of consulate attack dead, group says
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