
The state television reported on Thursday that Najjar would head a large security delegation to Islamabad for talks with his Pakistani counterpart and other top officials on means of fighting Jundullah.
“Mustafa Mohammad Najjar will meet Pakistani officials – about the recent terrorist attack and ways of fighting against the terrorist group,” Iranian Interior Ministry spokesman Mehdi Azar Makan said.
Iran on Tuesday turned up the heat on Pakistan saying that Jundullah, which claimed responsibility for the October 18 suicide bombing, is based on its territory; however Islamabad has denied the allegations.
Top commanders of the Revolutionary Guards were among 42 people killed in the attack – the deadliest assault in recent years on Iran’s prestigious military force, which was set up after the 1979 Islamic revolution.
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