Pakistan Rejects Khalilzad’s Claim ISIS-K Commander Was Killed in Punjab

Islamabad says the incident was a criminal attack, not a counter-terror operation, and dismisses any ISKP presence in the province

Mon Nov 17 2025
icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan has dismissed a claim by former U.S special envoy for Afghanistan Zalmay Khalilzad, who alleged that an ISIS-Khorasan (ISIS-K) commander had been killed in Punjab.

Khalilzad, in a post on X on Sunday night, stated that a senior ISIS-K commander identified as Burhan, also known as Zaid, was reportedly killed in Patak, part of Akhtarabad city in Punjab.

Responding on Monday, Pakistan’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting official fact-checking account clarified that the incident occurred in Habibabad, Kasur district, on March 5 — not in Akhtarabad as claimed.

The ministry further stated that Burhan’s death resulted from a robbery-related incident or personal enmity rather than any counter-terror operation.

Authorities confirmed that a First Information Report (FIR) was filed on March 6 at the Saddar Pattoki police station. Burhan had been residing with his father-in-law, Shah Muhammad, near a fruit market in Habibabad.

The ministry emphasized that there is no presence of ISIS-K/ISKP elements in Punjab according to credible security assessments. It further noted there is no evidence linking Burhan to ISKP, let alone identifying him as a commander.

The MoIB criticized Khalilzad’s post for misrepresenting a “purely criminal or personal dispute” as an act linked to terrorism, warning that such assertions create a misleading perception of ISKP activity in the province.

The case, officials reiterated, remains strictly a criminal matter unrelated to militancy or organized terror groups.

icon-facebook icon-twitter icon-whatsapp