India-Pakistan |
LeT infiltrating Indian political parties |
2005-12-05 |
![]() Another Srinagar-based member of the Lashkar cell, Shakeel Ahmad Sofi, was a member of the State Youth Congress. Sofi had even obtained official accommodation two years ago after claiming that his life was under threat from terrorist groups. Like Bukhari, Sofi used party identification cards to move Lashkar personnel, weapons and communication equipment past security checkpoints. Police investigators had discovered ammunition, grenades and a hand-held satellite phone in Sofi's home on Thursday. The three Lashkar terrorists killed yesterday, investigators say, were transported to Srinagar by Bukhari and Sofi from two camps perched on the Arin mountains, above the small frontier town of Bandipora. Commanded by two Lashkar operatives so far identified only by their aliases, `Saad Bhai' and `Bilal Bhai', the camps are thought to have been launching pads for several of the fidayeen suicide squads who have carried out a succession of major terror strikes across central and northern Kashmir in recent months. Apart from using the fact that security personnel are reluctant to search individuals who possess identification from major political parties, Sofi also purchased a white Maruti jeep that was outfitted to resemble an official vehicle of the kind often used by bureaucrats and police officers. After the October fidayeen attack in Srinagar's high-security Tulsi Bagh area that claimed the life of State Minister Abdul Gani Lone, the jeep was used to move a terrorist who survived the operation â code-named `Osama' â from Srinagar to safety. While the Hizb ul-Mujahideen, the largest militant group operating in Jammu and Kashmir, is long known to have built an elaborate network of political contacts in both the People's Democratic Party and the National Conference, this is the first time that hard evidence that the Lashkar has managed to penetrate the political system has been gathered. Analysts have long believed that the Lashkar, most of whose key operatives are Pakistani nationals, did not have significant numbers of ethnic Kashmiri supporters. Since 2002, however, when 22 mainly ethnic Kashmiri Lashkar cadre were arrested in Srinagar, this received wisdom has been under siege. Investigators are now focussing on the overground infrastructure used by the overall commander of the Lashkar's central and north Kashmir operations, Rawalpindi resident Mohammad Rashid `Sulfi'. Rashid was killed late last night by the Jammu and Kashmir Police, acting on information provided by the Intelligence Bureau. Using the alias Rahman Mota, or `Fat Rahman', Rashid had ordered a series of high-profile fidayeen actions, including an unsuccessful 2004 attempt on the life of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and an assault on former Chief Minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed's residence in Srinagar. Records of text messages sent to the satellite phone recovered from the Lashkar operative Sofi show he was connected with the Lashkar's amir-e-jihad, or overall head of military operations, an individual so far identified only by the alias `Abu Alqama'. Since `Abu Alqama' was also Rashid's immediate superior, and given the fact that the Lashkar commander had operated in Srinagar before shifting base to the northern Kashmir town of Sopore, investigators believe all of the Lashkar's operations may have shared a common pool of well-connected and apparently respectable overground operatives in the city. Among the individuals on whom attention is now being focussed is Tariq Dar, a Srinagar-based pharmaceutical salesman who was recently arrested on charges of handling the funds that were used to finance the Delhi serial bombings last month. Sources say Rashid was in touch with Dar, although it is unlikely he knew of the Delhi bombings. Intelligence sources say they suspect Dar also funnelled funds to two other major Lashkar units, the south Kashmir group commanded by an operative code-named `Abu Maaz', and the north Kashmir group headed by an individual who uses the code-names `Salahuddin' and `Haider'. |
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India-Pakistan | ||
A bank robberâs arrest cracks J&K terror net | ||
2005-12-03 | ||
The arrest of a bank robber on Wednesday has led the J&K Police to the network behind eight major militant strikes. These include the recent assassination of the junior Education Minister, the attack on Prime Minister Manmohan Singhâs public rally and several suicide attacks in Srinagar. The robber who landed in the police net on November 30 told them about a network of militant conduits who were members of the youth wings of the National Conference and Congress, operating from a high-security official accommodation for protected persons.
Police caught the robber by sheer chance. A group of four robbers had come to the downtown branch of a local bank, held the staff and people hostage at gun point and looted around Rs 12 lakh from the cashier. But as they fled, one of them slipped and fell and was caught by a group of angry people. The manâlater identified as Mushtaq Ahmadâwas immediately handed over to the policemen who rushed in from a nearby checkpoint. ââMushtaq was questioned and soon he spilled the beans. What he told us shocked everybody. He gave us leads about a network that included political activists under government protection, operating from a high-security hotel room allotted to one of them,ââ a senior police officer says. ââThey had been ferrying and helping fidayeens to carry out strikes in the city and their activity had gone unnoticed.ââ The officer said they helped to smuggle in the fidayeens to assassinate Education Minister Ghulam Nabi Lone. ââWe immediately sounded an alert and conducted raids everywhere. Within hours, we had captured most of the men in the network. We later killed three Pakistani militants as well,ââ he said. Mushtaq led the police to Shabir Bukhari and Shakeel Ahmad Sofi, both from Kreeri in Baramullah. They were travelling in their Gypsy, that was used frequently for ferrying fidayeens, when they were intercepted. Police say Bukhari and Sofi were also involved in the bank robbery which they had planned without consulting the Pakistani militants. ââThis robbery was not part of the militant itenary. Three of them were, in fact, waiting to execute another major fidayeen attack on Doordarshan and Radio Kashmir building,ââ says the officer. Police say that Sofi had secured the membership of Youth National Conference and was alloted a room in the high-security Dolphin hotel where the government has put up political activists who face a threat to their lives. National Conference leader Ali Mohamamd Sagar, however, denied that Sofi was a member of the organisation. Bukhari, a lawyer, is a member of the Youth Congress but J&K Congress president and minister Peerzada Mohamamd Syed denied that he was a member.
They took the fidayeens on a recce on October 8. Police say the operation was postponed by a week on the instruction of Bilal, a militant commander, who called Sofi on his mobile phone. ââThen again on October 18, the duo smuggled the two fidayeens inside the high-security colony from the main gate,ââ he says. One of them was killed at the gate of Tarigamiâs residence while the other had sneaked into Education Minister Loneâs residence and killed him. The police officer says that the militant who escaped called up Sofi, who along with Bukhari picked him up and took him to Bandipore. Police say Sofi and Bukhari have been running this network for one and half years. According to them, the other attacks they helped organise include: ⢠The attack to disrupt the public rally of Prime minister Manmohan Singh on November, 17, 2004. | ||
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