In the heart of Balochistan’s Kalat district, a tragedy unfolded that should haunt the conscience of every Pakistani. Just days after the deadly bus attack in the Zhob area of Balochistan, another passenger bus came under attack that claimed three innocent lives, including two Karachi-based Sabri qawwals, and left 13 others injured on the outskirts of Kalat on Wednesday. SSP Shahzad told Dawn that three people who lost their lives in bus firing Kalat included famous qawal Ahmed Hussain Sabri, his son Ahmed Raza Sabri, who left for Quetta along with other musicians of the group in a bus. These were not politicians or security personnel; they were artists, men of peace, custodians of Pakistan’s cultural heritage. Their only crime was singing songs of joy in a land where terrorists, emboldened by foreign agendas, seek to silence every note of harmony.
While the perpetrators of this heinous act have not yet been officially identified, the pattern of violence fits into a disturbingly familiar sequence of events. This incident is part of a broader campaign that Pakistan has long warned the world about, often referred to as Fitna al Hindustan.
Fitna al Hindustan is not a poetic term. It is the cold, calculated reality of India’s multi-dimensional hybrid war against Pakistan. Through funding terror outfits, orchestrating destabilizing events, and running propaganda campaigns to malign Pakistan globally, India has consistently weaponized subversion as a state policy. This is not accidental, nor is it about defending any supposed human rights or minority causes. It is a deliberate effort to fragment Pakistan from within.
Balochistan has been one of the primary frontlines of this covert war. Terror proxies operating in the province have a well-documented history of targeting civilians, Chinese workers, teachers, and now, even cultural icons. These actions are not about Baloch rights or autonomy. They are part of a systematic attempt to destabilize Pakistan. The attack on the musicians in Kalat fits tragically well into this broader agenda of chaos and cultural destruction.
India’s Research and Analysis Wing has long been linked to these operations. From the arrest of Kulbhushan Jadhav, an Indian naval officer captured in Pakistan while running sabotage operations, to the detailed dossiers presented by Islamabad at the United Nations and other global platforms, the evidence is irrefutable. India is not just interfering in Pakistan’s affairs; it is actively sponsoring violence and terror against the Pakistani people.
This latest attack is particularly sinister because it targeted musicians. In Pakistan, such artists are more than entertainers. They are storytellers, historians, and cultural ambassadors. They hold together the social fabric of a region that has for centuries preserved its identity through oral traditions and poetry. By attacking them, the enemies of Pakistan are not just committing murder. They are attempting to destroy the cultural memory and cohesion of Pakistani society.
This is not the first time cultural figures have been targeted. Terror groups operating under the umbrella of foreign-backed separatism have systematically tried to silence voices of peace and unity, replacing them with narratives of division, hate, and violence. When you kill a musician, you are not just silencing a song. You are trying to erase a history of harmony and communal connection that binds people together.
India has cleverly cloaked its involvement in Balochistan under the guise of human rights advocacy. But this is a smokescreen. The reality is far more sinister. By arming, funding, and facilitating terror proxies, India seeks to halt Pakistan’s progress, particularly the success of projects like the China Pakistan Economic Corridor and Gwadar, which are transforming Balochistan’s economy. New Delhi fears that a prosperous and stable Balochistan will make Pakistan regionally stronger, while exposing India’s failing policy of regional dominance.
Despite these provocations, Pakistan remains committed to peace, development, and the cultural integrity of Balochistan. The state will continue to secure its borders, protect its citizens, and expose the foreign hands fueling terrorism. The security forces, along with the people of Balochistan, stand united against this menace.
The Kalat tragedy is not just a local incident. It is part of a larger design orchestrated by India through proxies and covert operations. The international community must stop ignoring these violations of international law and recognize India’s role in destabilizing South Asia.
Pakistan will mourn the loss of its innocent artists, but it will also reaffirm its resolve to defeat the Fitna al Hindustan. The songs at Balochistan will not be silenced. Pakistan will not be broken. And India’s covert war will ultimately collapse under the weight of its own deceit and cruelty.


