Khawarij’s Cowardly Attack on Bannu
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
The shattered walls of the Fateh Khel police post in Bannu are more than the remains of a terrorist attack. They are a painful reminder of the price Pakistan continues to pay in its fight against extremism. In the darkness of the night, a suicide bomber rammed an explosives-laden vehicle into the police facility, followed by armed militants opening fire on officers and reinforcements rushing to the scene. By morning, the rubble carried the stories of martyred policemen who had stood between terror and ordinary citizens. This was not just an attack on a checkpoint. It was an assault on peace, stability, and the very people the terrorists falsely claim to represent. The Khawarij deliberately target police personnel because they know these officers are the first line of defence for society. In districts like Bannu and North Waziristan, policemen are not distant state officials; they are local sons of the soil who belong to the same communities they protect. By killing Pashtun police officers, these militants expose their real face, one driven not by ideology or religion, but by hatred, fear, and destruction. Reports suggest the attackers used sophisticated tactics, including ambushes and drones, to maximize casualties. Yet despite these cowardly methods, the response of the police and security forces reflected resilience rather than fear. Even after suffering losses, operations against militants in nearby areas continued, resulting in the elimination of several terrorists and the destruction of their hideouts. What makes such attacks even more tragic is the deliberate misuse of religion by extremist groups. Suicide bombing has no justification in Islam. Islamic scholars across the world have repeatedly declared the killing of innocents and self-destruction to be forbidden acts. The Khawarij distort religious teachings to recruit vulnerable minds, but their brutality only distances them further from Islamic values of mercy, justice, and humanity. These attacks are caref