On 29 July 2025, the local administration, on recommendation of the district intelligence coordination committee, imposed a three‑day curfew in 16 areas of Lowi Mamund tehsil including Badi Siah, Tarkho, Irab, Gat, Agra, Khurchai, and others—from early morning to late afternoon daily—under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. On 30 July 2025, in the early hours, security forces backed by helicopter gunships and artillery launched Operation Sarbakaf. Initially, the operation was temporarily suspended in response to widespread protests, allowing peace talks between tribal jirgas and militants to proceed. However, after the negotiations collapsed, security forces resumed the offensive, leading to renewed displacement. Security sources stated that militants must leave Bajaur or face a full-scale operation; alternatively, tribes were asked to vacate the area temporarily to allow military action. The government rejected negotiations unless the militants submitted to the state. On August 12th, 2 security personnel were killed and 19 injured in Inayata Qila Pathak, Bajaur district. One soldier was killed while six soldiers including a major sustained injuries when an improvised explosive device (IED) went off near their military vehicle in Inayat Kala Bypass of Bajaur District in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on August 20. Between September 10 and 13, security operations against militants occurred in multiple areas, including an operation in Bajaur that left 22 militants dead. On October 10th, two security personnel lost their lives in a skirmish between the Pakistani Taliban and the security forces earlier in Mamund, Bajaur district. On November 27th, a security force personnel was gunned down in a targeted attack. On December 4th, a quadcopter attack killed two security force personnel and injured 2 others. On December 16th, a police officer who was providing security for polio vaccination teams was killed in Salarzai tehsil, Bajaur district. On December 29th, a Pakistan Army officer, Major Adeel Zaman, and 5 TTP-affiliates were killed in an intelligence based operation in Khar area of Bajaur, as per ISPR. On 16 February 2026, a
suicide car bombing targeted a joint Frontier Corps (FC) and police check post in Malangi, Mamund Tehsil, Bajaur District. Police officials reported that the attack killed 11 personnel, including one police officer and nine FC members, while two officers were injured. The vehicle, reportedly loaded with explosives, collided with a building that previously housed a madrassa but had been converted into a security post. Rescue operations were ongoing to evacuate additional casualties from the rubble. Militant then launched an assault on the checkpoint, triggering a shootout which left 12 militants dead. The Pakistani military has not issued an official statement regarding the incident. Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Sohail Afridi condemned the attack, calling it “extremely tragic” and directed rescue agencies to intensify operations. He emphasized that terrorism is a nationwide challenge and vowed to intensify operations against militant elements in the province. This attack represents a continuation of militant activity in Bajaur, where security forces have faced repeated assaults, including the killing of a police inspector in Wara Mamund days earlier. The region remains a focus of Operation Sarbakaf, Pakistan’s ongoing counterinsurgency efforts in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. On 25 February 2026, unidentified armed men attacked the Ababeel Police Squad in the Nawi Kali area of Tehsil Khar in Bajaur District. 4 police officers were killed and two were injured. ==Civilian casualties ==