Jaffar Express
The Jaffar Express is a daily express passenger train operated by Pakistan Railways, connecting Quetta in Balochistan province with Peshawar Cantonment in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and covering a distance of 1,632 kilometres through western Pakistan's varied terrain.[1][2] The service, named after Mir Jaffar Khan Jamali, a Baloch tribal leader and early supporter of Pakistan's creation, typically completes the journey in approximately 34 hours, making around 37 stops at major stations including Lahore, Rawalpindi, and Kohat.[3][1] As one of Pakistan's longest domestic rail routes, the Jaffar Express facilitates essential passenger and goods transport across regions with limited alternative infrastructure, though its path through Balochistan's insurgency-affected areas has exposed it to repeated militant disruptions.[4] The train achieved notoriety in March 2025 when Baloch Liberation Army militants hijacked it near the Bolan Pass, holding hundreds hostage for over 24 hours and resulting in casualties among passengers and security personnel, an incident that underscored ongoing separatist violence targeting state-linked transport.[5][3] Subsequent attacks, including improvised explosive device blasts in June and September 2025 that derailed coaches and injured dozens, have further highlighted the route's vulnerability despite security measures.[6][7]