Punjab Chief Minister Shahbaz Sharif, while addressing a press conference in Lahore on Friday, claimed that the suspects involved in planning and carrying out the Feb 13 suicide bombing on a protest at Lahore's Charing Cross belonged to Afghanistan.
During the conference, Sharif also announced the arrest of an alleged facilitator of the attacker, who he said belonged to Fata's Bajaur Agency, which neighbours Afghanistan.
Read more: Caught on CCTV: Lahore blast facilitator, other suspects arrested
The suspect's confessional statement was aired during the briefing.
Read also: Each drop of the nation's blood shall be revenged: Gen Bajwa
The suspect introduced himself as Anwar-ul-Haq, and said he hailed from a remote village in Bajaur Agency.
View more: Lal Shahbaz Qalandar shrine blast; 83 martyred, more than 343 injured
“I was associated with Jamaat-ul-Ahrar and they trained me,” said the suspect, adding that he has visited Afghanistan around 15 to 20 times.
View also: Torkham border sealed until further order
Shahbaz Sharif urged Afghan residents residing in Pakistan to call out any person they find suspicious.
See more: Peshawar: Two killed, 18 injured in Hayatabad blast
He said Pakistan had hosted Afghan migrants for more than 30 years, but some of them seemed to have turned their backs on the country.
"Please consider us your brothers and turn those you think are nefarious," he appealed.
Sharif voiced strong support for reviving military courts in the briefing, saying a lot of credit for curbing terrorism successfully in Pakistan went to them.
"PML-N government fully supports extending the tenure of military courts," he said, adding that it was "because of the fear of punishment that terror factions were hesitant before attacking".