
JAISH-E-MOHAMMAD
Jaish-e-Mohammad, or Army of the Prophet Mohammad, was established by Masood Azhar after his release from prison in India in 1999 and is based there as well.
According to the UN Security Council, the bargain was an trade for 155 hostages held on an American Airlines flight bound for Kandahar, in southern Afghanistan.
After LeT and the party were blamed for the attack on India’s parliament in 2001, Pakistan banned the organization in 2002.
According to the UN Security Council, the team had connections to Al-Qaeda, which Osama bin Laden founded, and the Taliban.
JeM’s headquarters is thought to be in Bahawalpur, Punjab, in the town center of Pakistan.
In Kashmir, where India has battled an armed rebellion since the late 1980s, it has claimed responsibility for many death attacks, despite the violence’s abstinence in recent years.
India claimed to have attacked Markaz Subhan Allah in Bahawalpur, which it called JeM’s office, which was located about 100 kilometers from the borders.
Despite Pakistan’s moratorium on JeM in 2002, US and Indian officials claim that it still operates there.
Except for occasional rumors of his existence close to the city, where he runs a religious institution, Azhar has vanished from the public gaze.