Girls' school blown up in Pakistan's Lower South Waziristan, KP
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
A government girls' primary school was completely destroyed in an overnight explosion in the Sara Ghowara area of Birmal tehsil, Lower South Waziristan district, in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province on Tuesday night, 24 June 2026. Unidentified assailants targeted the school building with explosive material in the late hours, according to local media reports.
What Happened
District Police Officer (DPO) Muhammad Tahir Shah confirmed that an initial report has been lodged and a formal investigation launched into the attack. As of Wednesday, no individual or group had claimed responsibility for the blast, which gutted the school structure.
This is not an isolated incident in Birmal tehsil. Two earlier attacks on schools by unidentified assailants were reported in the same tehsil in February and March 2026, according to local police and residents, pointing to a sustained pattern of targeting educational infrastructure in the district.
A Sharply Rising Trend in 2026
According to partial data compiled by the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP) up to 14 June 2026, at least 11 attacks on educational institutions have been recorded in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa in 2026 alone, resulting in 13 deaths. The contrast with the previous year is stark: during the same period in 2025, only one such attack was reported in KP, in which three children were injured.
For the full year 2025, a total of 11 attacks on educational institutions were reported in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, injuring three people — a figure that 2026 has already matched in roughly six months, according to an Eurasia Review report.
Two Decades of Documented Violence
Tushar Ranjan Mohanty, Research Associate at the Institute for Conflict Management, writing in Eurasia Review, noted that since 2006, at least 557 attacks targeting educational institutions have been recorded in Pakistan's conflict-affected regions, resulting in 321 fatalities and 208 injuries. He cautioned that 'since media access is heavily restricted in the most disturbed areas of KP, and there is only fitful release of information by government agencies, the actual figures could be much higher.'
The first documented attack on an educational institution occurred on 25 December 2006, when a bomb explosion damaged a girls' school in the Noor Ali Kalay area of Darra Adamkhel tehsil in Kohat district. Mohanty noted that prior to that attack, 'extremists had reportedly circulated threatening letters to several middle and high schools, warning school authorities to stop girls from studying beyond Class IV or face the destruction of school facilities and the killing of school principals.'
The Deadliest Benchmark: APS Peshawar 2014
The most lethal single attack on a school in the region remains the Army Public School (APS) massacre in Peshawar in 2014, when a seven-member squad of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) stormed the campus. At least 135 students, 10 school staff members including the principal, and 3 soldiers were killed; 121 people — including 118 students and 3 staff members — were injured in the attack.
The latest blast in Lower South Waziristan underscores that despite the passage of more than a decade since APS, girls' education in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa's conflict zones remains a deliberate target. With no group claiming responsibility and investigations at a preliminary stage, the attack is likely to intensify calls for greater security around schools in the province.