ISLAMABAD: More than 386 personnel of armed forces and para-military forces, including 137 army and 208 cops, have been martyred during first nine months of current year of 2023 in the fight against terrorism, mostly in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Balochistan, putting it on an eight-year high, a report released by an research organization in Islamabad.
“With 1,087 violence-related fatalities recorded so far during the current year 2023, the outlaws suffered 368 (34 per cent), followed by civilians with 333 (31 per cent) fatalities”, revealed the reports of the Centre for Research and Security Studies (CRSS) report, Q3 2023.
The report noted that there was a consistent and alarming increase in violence in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and Balochistan.
Equally greater concern is the collective percentage of violence-related fatalities recorded in these two provinces which indicates a disturbing upward trend over the last five years; together, they suffered 72 per cent of all fatalities in 2019, and this unsettling figure surged to a staggering 92 per cent in the first 9 months of 2023.
During the third quarter of 2023, close to 445 people lost their lives and 440 were injured in 190 terror attacks and counter-terror operations.
The report stated that KP and Balochistan were the epicenter of the violence, accounting for nearly 94 per cent of fatalities and 89 per cent of attacks (including incidents of terrorism and security forces operations) recorded during this period. The last quarter also recorded an alarming surge in violence by about 57 per cent, with the overall number of fatalities increasing from 284 in Q2 to 445 in Q3 of 2023.
This includes a staggering 131 per cent uptick recorded in Balochistan and 28 per cent in KP. Punjab witnessed a substantial 67 per cent decrease in violence compared to the last quarter, while Sindh saw a 283 per cent rise in violence though the number of fatalities was very low (23). Nearly 79 per cent of all violence-related casualties recorded in the third quarter of 2023 resulted from terrorism; where 141 terrorist attacks caused 318 fatalities and 381 injuries of civilians and security personnel.
On the other hand, 127 outlaws were killed and 59 were injured during 49 security operations.
The report noted the figures point out a huge gap in the frequency of terror attacks and counter-terror operations as well as the number of outlaws killed in security operations.
The civilians bore the heaviest brunt of violence, in the outgoing quarter, as they were among the 58 per cent of all casualties, followed by security personnel, suffering nearly 23 per cent. The outlaws suffered the least; constituting only about 20 per cent of all casualties in this period. The first 9 months of 2023 reveal some alarming trends with regard to the security forces’ losses.
First, with 386 lives lost so far into the year, their fatalities have hit a record 8-year high, exceeding the 2016 level and highest since 2015. Second, their percentage of the fatalities among other victims of violence recorded this year (nearly 36 per cent) has also hit a record 11-year high. And third, the period from 2021 on wards records a constant rise in the number of fatalities. — (INP)
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