Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) Director-General, Lieutenant General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, deals with a press conference to provide details about Jaffar Express-Capture and the clearance operation that followed.
Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfaraz Bugti also attends the conference.
The test began on Tuesday, when separatist militants adhered to Jaffar Express on the way from Quetta to Peshawar, the railway track jumped up and attacked the train with rockets.
Security forces stormed the hijacked Jaffar Express on Wednesday and brought a dramatic ending to a 30-hour siege in the harsh Bolan area of Balochistan, killing all 33 terrorists while successfully saving more than 300 passengers.
One day after the operation, the Foreign Office said there was no doubt that the attack was linked to Afghanistan.
Spokesman Shafqat Ali Khan told the media that the Afghan earth had been used against Pakistan, and the latest terrorist attack on Jaffar Express near Sibi in Balochistan was also orchestrated and directed by terrorist leaders operating from abroad.
“Terrorists were in direct communication with Afghanistan-based planners throughout the incident,” he said. The Foreign Office Declaration came after the army also officially confirmed the Afghan line to the brave train hijacking.
The spokesman said Pakistan had repeatedly asked the preliminary Afghan government to deny the use of his land for terrorist groups such as, among other things, their attacks against Pakistan.