Pakistan on Monday launched a massive military operation in Punjab province in the wake of the deadly Taliban suicide bombing in Lahore, conducting raids and making several arrests.
Intelligence agencies along with army and rangers personnel carried out a series of operations in different parts of Punjab, the country's most populous province, a day after the suicide blast at a popular park in which 72 people, mostly women and children, were killed.
"A number of suspected terrorists and facilitators have been arrested during the five raids which were conducted in Lahore, Faisalabad and Multan after the Lahore suicide explosion," army media wing Inter-Services Public Relations Director General Lt Gen Asim Bajwa said earlier but did not officially say that a widespread operation had been launched similar to the ones underway in the country's northwest and Karachi.
He added that a "huge cache of arms and ammunition" were also recovered by security officials.
There has long been a demand for launching a military operation in southern part of Punjab province because of the presence of militants hideouts there.
Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and Chief of Army Staff Gen Raheel Sharif separately chaired high-level security meetings to review the situation and directed law enforcement agencies including army and rangers to launch a comprehensive operation in Punjab province.
The police were also able to identify the Lahore suicide bomber as Yousuf, son of Ghulam Farid, a resident of Muzzafargarh in southern Punjab.
He was believed to be between 20-25 years old. A sketch prepared with the help of eye-witnesses showed him with beard.
During the meeting, Sharif was briefed by heads of law enforcement and intelligence agencies on different leads-based progress regarding yesterday's blast at the park, which was comparatively more crowded due to the Easter holiday.
The park is located in a posh-locality in Lahore, the hometown of the premier.
Sharif said: "Terrorists and their facilitators will eventually meet their logical end. We have to win the war (against terror). Coward terrorists are targeting innocent children and women."
The whole nation would have to be united in the face of terrorism, he said, adding that the provinces should speed up intelligence-based operations against terrorists.
"We must take this war to the doors of terrorist outfits before they are able to hit our innocent countrymen.
"We will not let terrorists play with the lives of innocent people," he said and directed the intelligence agencies have better coordination with each other to prevent terror attacks.
"Our resolve to fight terrorism as a nation and as a government is getting stronger... Our goal is not only to eliminate terror infrastructure but also the extremist mind-set, which is a threat to our way of life," he said.
Sharif said that winning the war against terrorism was "imperative" for the country.
He once again resolved to eliminate the threat of terrorism from the country, according to an official statement.
"The terrorists have assassinated our kids; sons and daughters in this war, and God willing, we will wipe them out from this country," he said.
The meeting was attended by Chief Minister Punjab Shahbaz Sharif, Interior Minister Nisar Ali Khan, and Law Minister Punjab Rana Sanaullah Khan.
Earlier in the day, the PM visited Jinnah hospital Lahore on his arrival from Islamabad and met the injured of the Gulshan-i-Iqbal tragedy.
Wishing them good health and speedy recovery, Sharif spent some time with the injured and was also briefed on their condition by hospital management.
He directed for special medical care of the injured.
Former interior minister Rehman Malik had said that there were at least 150 sleeper cells of banned Lashkar-e-Jhangvi -- which reportedly has joined hands with the banned Tahreek-e-Taliban Pakistan -- in south Punjab.
Image: Security officials gather at the site of a blast outside a public park in Lahore. Photograph: Mohsin Raza/Reuters
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