The Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) on Monday arrested a suspect from Bani Gala on the outskirts of Islamabad for his “anti-state campaign” on social media over the recent attack on the Jaffar Express train in Balochistan.
The incident occurred on Tuesday afternoon when the train, travelling from Quetta to Peshawar and carrying 440 passengers, was ambushed by the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA) terrorists. They opened fire on the train and held the passengers hostage, prompting the security forces to initiate an operation that lasted two days.
On Wednesday evening, Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director General Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry confirmed that the operation had been concluded, with 33 terrorists present at the site of the attack neutralised. The ISPR chief also confirmed that 21 passengers and four Frontier Corps personnel lost their lives in the hijacking, but no hostages were harmed during the final rescue phase.
According to a statement by an FIA spokesperson, the suspect was arrested during a raid in Bani Gala for “spreading hate campaign against state institutions”.
The suspect, identified as Haider Saeed, had “shared negative propaganda and derogatory content against institutions during the Jaffar Express tragedy”, the statement added.
The statement further cited his involvement in “supporting and promoting banned terrorist organisations on social media” and said that the suspect was “not only running a poisonous campaign against state institutions but also kept sharing inflammatory statements and content in favour of terrorists”.
An investigation was launched by seizing the suspect’s social media accounts and digital evidence, the statement added, warning that strict action would be taken against him.
FIA’s cybercrime wing filed a First Information Report (FIR) dated March 16, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com. The FIR detailed that the suspect allegedly propagated false and misleading information on social media.
The report said, “[The suspect] is found sharing highly intimidating content/tweets on social media/Twitter…”
It further stated, “Moreover, the user … propagated highly intimidating tweet by glorifying the banned outfit i.e. Balochistan Liberation Army … with criminal intent to coerce, intimidate, create sense of fear and panic/insecurity in government and public.
“Such intimidating content … to glorify the banned outfit BLA and their terrorist activities, is clearly fanning insurgency in the state and a mischievous act of subversion to damage the state of Pakistan.”
Azma slams PTI for ‘poisonous’ campaign
Punjab Information Minister Azma Bokhari on Monday slammed the PTI for a “poisonous” campaign against the state and security forces.
Speaking on the Jaffar Express incident, she said, “In these times, you need to keep political divides aside and stand with your country and institutions. [But] there is a party which always runs a poisonous anti-state campaign, especially against security forces and our enemies take advantage of that.”
She highlighted the involvement of the Indian media during the incident. “Their media was prepared and had AI footage to run during the incident to give the impression that Pakistan is a failed state.”
“The campaign [by PTI] was the same as the Indian media,” she said, claiming the similarities were not coincidental.
“There were tweets from the party’s official X handle in support of the terrorists,” she added.
Azma also criticised KP’s Chief Minister Ali Amin Khan Gandapur for ignoring the security concerns in KP. “KP is on the front line of terrorism, but CM Gandapur held a press conference regarding the Afghan policy saying they should not be expelled out,” she added.
She highlighted the involvement of Afghanistan in recent terror attacks such as Jaffar Express incident and Bannu attack, stating, “Gandapur is more worried about the Afghan people than those in KP.”