JAISH-E-MOHAMMAD
Jaish-e-Mohammad, or army of the prophet Mohammad, founded by Masood Azhar, is also based in Punjab, founded by Masood Azhar in 1999.
The agreement was an exchange of 155 hostages held on an Indian flight from airlines, which came in the south of the city of Kandahar in Afghanistan, the United Nations Security Council said.
Pakistan prohibited the group in 2002 afterwards, with Let, was blamed for the 2001 attack against the Parliament of India.
The group had links with Al-Qaeda, founded by Osama bin Laden, and the Taliban, said the United Nations Security Council.
Jem would be based in the central city of Pakistan in Bahawalpur, also in Punjab.
He has claimed the responsibility of numerous cashmere suicide bombings, where India has fought against an armed insurrection since the late 1980s, although violence has decreased in recent years.
India said that he attacked Markaz Subhan Allah from Bahawalpur, which he called Jem's headquarters, located about 100 km from the border.
Despite the ban on Pakistan in 2002 on Jem, the United States and the Indian authorities say that it still operates there openly.
Azhar has disappeared from the eyes of the public, with the exception of sporadic relationships of his presence near the city, where he directs a religious institution.