Over 2,800 of the 3,794 polling stations in Balochistan have been classified as "very sensitive" and more than 98,600 security personnel will be deployed for securing the May 11 general election that will mark the first democratic transition of power in Pakistan's history.
Akbar Durrani, the Home Secretary of Balochistan, told a visiting group of foreign journalists that the administration was dealing with several issues while handling security for the polls, including threats from insurgent and terrorist groups and intense tribal rivalries.
However, Javed's brother Akhtar Mengal, a former Chief Minister of the province, recently returned to Pakistan from years in self-exile to lead his faction of the Balochistan National Party in the polls.
And while senior PML-N leader Changez Marri is among those contesting the polls, his brother Hyrbyair Marri heads the Baloch Liberation Army, one of the insurgent groups that officials describe as a major threat to the election process.
More From This Section
Officials said the tribal rivalries and divisions reflected the complex political scenario in Balochistan, which accounts for almost half of Pakistan's territory but has only 3.3 million of the total electorate of over 80 million voters.
The most devastating attack was one that targeted senior PML-N leader Sanaullah Zehri, killing his son, brother and nephew.