Up to 200 still held hostage amid train hijack standoff in Pakistan

6 hours ago 1

An operation to rescue hundreds of people taken hostage when a train was hijacked by a separatist militant group in remote south-west Pakistan continued into its second day, with dozens killed in the onslaught.

On Wednesday, Pakistan’s security services claimed to have rescued about 190 people who were being held captive after militants from the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) blew up a railway line and launched an attack on the Jaffar Express train.

The hijacking took place as the train, which was carrying about 450 passengers, was travelling through a tunnel in the rugged mountains of Balochistan province on Tuesday afternoon.

Officials said that by Wednesday about 30 militants had been killed as military and security personnel launched an air and land offensive to take back control from the militants. However, the efforts were hindered by the remote, treacherous terrain, which has made communication and mobilisation difficult.

A government official said about 130 hostages were still being held by the BLA and remained on the train. “There was an attempt to rescue the hostages last night but it was repelled by the insurgents. In the morning, another attempt was repelled,” the official said, requesting anonymity as he did not have permission to brief the media.

The BLA has claimed that large numbers of those it is holding are military or police personnel, but the regional government has said that the hostages are mostly civilians.

According to local media reports, the BLA had stationed suicide bombers in explosive vests close to some of the hostages, further complicating their rescue. “The terrorists are using innocent people as human shields,” an official told Radio Pakistan.

Yousaf Bashir was among the passengers on the train who was allowed to leave the train. Describing the moment that the train was held up by the militants, he said: “There was a huge blast. Everyone was scared and people were screaming and crying loudly. We laid down during the blasts. Everyone laid down in the train as there was firing too.”

He said militants had come over after the firing stopped and demanded all the passengers get off the train or they would be killed. “They freed my children, my wife and me too. They warned us not to look back and kept walking. I did not see how many people there were left behind,” said Bashir.

Those who the BLA allowed to leave the train described walking to safety through the rugged mountain terrain for more than seven hours overnight.

In a written statement sent to the Guardian, the BLA said the hijacking was “a direct response to Pakistan’s decades-long colonial occupation of Balochistan and the relentless war crimes committed against the Baloch people”.

Balochistan, a vast but underdeveloped region bordering Iran and Afghanistan, has been home to a decades-long separatist insurgency fighting against the Pakistan state and military, which it has accused of neglecting and exploiting the region.

“The Bolan operation is a tactical response to these atrocities, intended to demonstrate that the occupying forces are not invincible and that their continued presence in Balochistan will be met with unwavering resistance,” the BLA statement said.

The BLA continued to claim it still had 200 hostages, a number that could not be independently verified. On Tuesday evening, they had offered to swap the hostages for Baloch political prisoners.

The BLA has recently amped up its operations in Balochistan and has been behind some of the worst terrorist attacks in Pakistan in the past few years. Zahid Hussain, a security analyst, said the train hijacking was “unprecedented”. He added: “This attack shows the situation in Balochistan has become very challenging for the military. They have failed to contain the insurgency and militants are recruiting large numbers to carry out such attacks.”

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