Plain clothes security force perosnnel, who were rescued from a train after it was attacked by separatist militants, get into a vehcile following their arrival at a railway station in Mach, Balochistan
Credit: Reuters Photo
At least 16 terrorists were killed and 104 passengers rescued by the security forces after Baloch militants hijacked a passenger train in a tunnel in Pakistan's restive Balochistan province on Tuesday, security officials said.
Source: X/Geo News
Source: X/Geo News
The BLA is the strongest of a number of insurgent groups long operating in the area bordering Afghanistan and Iran, a mineral-rich region that is home to Beijing's investment in Gwadar deep water port and other projects.
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UN Secretary-General Antonio has strongly condemned the hijacking of a train in Pakistan’s Balochistan province and voiced concern about persons taken hostage, calling for their immediate release.
The UN Chief stressed that attacks against civilians are unacceptable.
“The Secretary-General strongly condemns the hijacking of a train in Pakistan’s Balochistan province,” a statement issued by his spokesman Stéphane Dujarric said.
Guterres is deeply concerned about the persons taken hostage and calls for their immediate release, the statement added.
Suspected Baloch gunmen opened fire at a passenger train in Pakistan's restive Balochistan on Tuesday. (PTI)
Credit: Reuters Photo
Credit: Reuters Photo
Credit: Reuters Photo
Amid ongoing rescue operations, news agency AFP, citing security sources, reported that at least 27 terorists had been killed thus far and 155 hostages of the 450-odd people being held have been rescued.
Pakistani security forces on Wednesday launched a "full-scale" operation on to rescue the remaining passengers taken hostage by militants, news agency AFP reported.
Credit: Reuters Photos
Some of the rescued passengers also claimed that the attackers told them that they were releasing Baloch, women, children and elderly people. However, government officials claimed they rescued over 100 of them.
Attackers wearing suicide bombs were sitting next to passengers taken hostage after militants took over a train in southwest Pakistan, sources said on Wednesday, complicating rescue efforts a day after the country's first such hijacking.
The separatist militants blew up a railway track and opened fire on the Jaffar Express on Tuesday as it travelled from Quetta, Balochistan's capital city, to Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Pakistani forces have rescued 155 passengers, and the government said a security operation was under way to free dozens still held hostage, without specifying the exact number.
Several of those rescued were brought to Quetta early Wednesday, escorted by security forces, where their relatives were waiting for them.
"People were attacked ... passengers were injured and some passengers died," said Muhammad Ashraf, who was on the train.
Pakistani security forces are carrying out a rescue operation to free dozens of passengers taken hostage by separatist militants who hijacked their train in the southwest of the country on Tuesday.
Here is a look at what happened, and the current situation.
The train
The Jaffar Express was heading to the city of Peshawar in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province from Quetta, the capital of Balochistan province, with 425 people on board when it was attacked.
The passengers included personnel from the Pakistani army and other security forces who were travelling on leave.
The attack
Militants blew up the railway tracks and opened fire on the train, killing the driver and trapping the locomotive inside a tunnel before taking control of it.
Some of those rescued said they crouched low when the firing started, while others spoke of passengers who had been injured or killed.
Rescue operation
Security forces have launched a massive operation to free the hostages, deploying special forces and helicopters, and 155 passengers have been rescued so far.
Some 27 militants have also been killed, sources say.
However, attackers wearing suicide bombs, who have been seated next to some of the hostages, have made the rescue efforts tougher.
The demands
Ethnic armed group Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which has claimed responsibility for the attack, has demanded the release of Baloch political prisoners, activists, and missing persons who it says were abducted by the military, within 48 hours.
It has threatened to start executing the hostages if the government does not fulfil the demand.
Government response
Pakistan's prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, has condemned the attack and said security officials are "repelling" the militants.
Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi has called the attackers "enemies" of Pakistan and vowed to foil their conspiracy to destabilise the nation. (Reuters)
Credit: Reuters Photo
Credit: Reuters Photo
Credit: Reuters Photo
Nearly 100 empty coffins were brought to the Quetta railway station where more people who were aboard the Jaffer Express were expected to arrive, a report in Reuters said.
Pakistan Railways has suspended all operations from Punjab and Sindh provinces to Balochistan until security agencies confirm the area is safe, local media reported on Wednesday. (Reuters)
Security forces rescued 190 passengers from a hijacked train, killing 30 Baloch militants in Pakistan's restive Balochistan, as they continued to battle heavily-armed insurgents for a second day on Wednesday.
The Jaffar Express, carrying some 400 passengers in nine coaches, was going from Quetta to Peshawar when militants derailed it using explosives and hijacked it. (PTI)
Militants who hijacked Pakistan train are in touch with their handlers, main handler in Afghanistan - Pakistan's junior interior minister has told Geo TV. Security operation has been conducted very carefully to avoid harm to hostages, he said. (Reuters)
"Now, a day has passed and the occupying state has only 24 hours left. If Pakistan does not make practical progress on the prisoner exchange within the given ultimatum, all hostages will be presented before the Baloch National Court. There, they will be tried on charges of state atrocities, colonial occupation, genocide, exploitation and involvement in war crimes in Balochistan. This trial will be prompt, impartial and transparent and if found guilty, the criminals will be punished according to Baloch national laws," a statement by Jeeyand Baloch, spokesperson for the Baloch Liberation Army said.
Baloch Army militants have said that they have killed 50 hostages since hijacking Jaffar Express train.
In direct retaliation to Pakistan’s persistent aggression, obstinacy, and failure to engage in a serious prisoner exchange, the BLA has executed 50 additional captive enemy personnel within the past hour. These individuals were found guilty by the Baloch National Court of war crimes, ethnic cleansing, enforced disappearances, resource exploitation, and acts of state terrorism in Balochistan.
Earlier, in response to last night’s Pakistani drone strike, 10 enemy personnel were executed. Additionally, in today’s clashes, another 10 Pakistani soldiers were eliminated, while 30 were killed in combat yesterday. This brings the total number of eliminated enemy personnel to over 100, while approximately 150 more hostages remain under BLA custody., the latest from the BLA said.
A military operation against militants who hijacked a train carrying hundreds of passengers in southwest Pakistan has ended, a spokesman for the army said late on Wednesday.
Some 33 militants and 21 hostages were killed during the operation, the spokesman said in a television broadcast. Close to 30 hostages have been rescued, officials said. (Reuters)
Giving an account of the military operation, Lt Gen Ahmad Sharif said that first, snipers neutralized the suicide bombers, followed by a step-by-step clearance of each train compartment, eliminating all terrorists present. He said that no passengers were harmed during the clearance operation.
Sharif stated that all terrorists present at the site had been eliminated, but the area and train were still being cleared as per standard operating procedures by the bomb disposal squad.
He said that efforts were also underway to gather passengers who had fled in different directions during the operation. (PTI)