Abdul Gani Lone | Abdul Gani Lone | All Party Hurriyat Conference | Afghanistan/South Asia | 20011227 |
India-Pakistan |
Indian forces try to stop separatists' march in Kashmir |
2015-05-22 |
[DAWN] Hundreds of government forces with automatic weapons patrolled the streets of India-held Kashmire's main city to stop a rally by separatists to mark the anniversaries of the liquidations of two Kashmiri leaders. The two, Mirwaiz Mohammed Farooq and Abdul Gani Lone, had supported Kashmire's right to vote on whether it should be independent or governed either by India or Pakistain, nuclear-armed nations that have fought two wars since 1947 over its control. The Himalayan territory is currently split by a heavily militarised line of control between India and Pakistain. |
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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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Afghanistan/South Asia |
Kashmiri separatists honor Lone's legacy |
2005-06-02 |
The last time a separatist leader from Indian Kashmir went to Pakistan and advised militants it was time to end the armed struggle and begin negotiating he was assassinated six months later. Abdul Gani Lone, a senior leader in the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom) Conference, was shot dead by unidentified gunmen in Srinagar, the summer capital of India's Jammu and Kashmir state, in May 2002 as India and Pakistan came close to a fourth war. Three years on, with South Asia's nuclear rivals' seeking lasting peace, Lone's torch has been picked up by other members of the Hurriyat alliance of separatist parties, who began a trip to Pakistan-held Kashmir on Thursday. "It is Lone's message. There is more and more recognition among moderates and within the Hurriyat that a negotiated settlement is preferable to armed struggle," said Samina Ahmed, Pakistan director of the Brussels-based International Crisis Group think tank. Ahmed saw the visiting Hurriyat leaders firstly seeking to forge a stronger sense of unity with moderates in Pakistan's side of Kashmir, and the next step would be to take the message to militants to wind down a conflict that has cost more than 45,000 lives since it began in 1989. The United Jihad Council, a loose alliance of around a dozen militant groups, ruled out meeting the Hurriyat leaders, who are coming without Syed Ali Shah Geelani, the leader of its hardline faction. But the Hurriyat moderates can still meet leaders of the insurgency individually, a council member told Reuters. "If the group has a meeting with leaders of militant organisations, it could be really important," commented a Western observer familiar with the India-Pakistan peace process. Certainly, the timing to get across any message is more propitious than when Lone made his pitch to Pakistan's jihadis, or holy warriors, two months after al Qaeda's Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. Whereas the Hurriyat leaders visiting the Pakistan side go with India's blessing, Lone was permitted to go for the marriage of his son Sajjad to the daughter of Amanullah Khan, chairman of the Pakistan-based Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF). After the feasting in Pakistan's army garrison city of Rawalpindi was over, Lone met militant leaders. "Abdul Gani Lone told them that militancy had done its job by re-invigorating the issue of Kashmir. It had given new life to the issue at national and international levels. They should now proceed towards the political process," Khan recalled. The jihadis were too stirred up to heed Lone's words, incensed by President Pervez Musharraf's decision to join Washington's global war on terrorism -- a decision that brought his government into conflict with several militant groups it had supported in Afghanistan and Kashmir. Less than two weeks ago, thousands of Kashmiris commemorated the anniversaries of the killings of the popular Lone and Mirwaiz Mohammed Farooq, the spiritual leader of Kashmiri Muslims, who was killed by unidentified gunmen in 1990. Both were killed on May 21 -- though 12 years apart. Sons of both slain men, Bilal Gani Lone and Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, were on the bus to Pakistani Kashmir on Thursday. "We will try to talk with political and militant leadership across the other side and seek their opinion," Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, the chairman of Hurriyat's moderate faction, told Reuters earlier this week. |
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India-Pakistan |
Hizbul Mujahedin vows leader will return |
2002-07-10 |
Jammu and Kashmirâs main militant group pledged that its Pakistan-based leader would eventually return to the Indian zone, after a local separatist leader dared him to come back. Hizbul Mujahedin said Syed Salahudin, who has led the group from Pakistani-administered Kashmir since 1994, was staying away from the Indian zone as âpart of the organisationâs strategy.â Yeah. He doesn't want to get shot. That'd be bad for the organization... âWhenever he (Salahudin) will think it proper, he will return and fight alongside other companions engaged in the struggle,â Saif-ul-Islam, Hizbulâs chief commander in Jammu and Kashmir, said. âNo power on earth would stop his return on that day,â Islam said of Salahudin. "The Duce: Calm, resolute, unstoppable..." Islam was reacting to remarks by Sajjad Lone, the son of slain separatist leader Abdul Gani Lone, who asked Salahudin to return to Kashmir and lead the campaign against elections due by mid-October. The statement came after the United Jihad Council called on separatists on the Indian side to campaign harder against the polls. "You want us to campaign harder? Why'n't you get outta yer air-conditioned office and help?" |
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India-Pakistan |
Indos say Lashkar behind Loneâs assassination |
2002-05-31 |
Although mystery still shrouds the killing of Hurriyat leader Abdul Gani Lone during a public rally in Srinagar on May 21, the needle of suspicion is increasingly pointing towards three Lashkar-e-Taiba thugs. Radio intercepts indicate that Abu Hadeed, along with two other associates, Abu Raheel and Abu Hamza, were assigned the task of eliminating the Hurriyat leader. The whole plan was master-minded by Jamaat-ul-Mujhideenâs chief Gulam Rasool Bhat, alias General Abdullah, who had directed Laskhar operation commander, Abu Shamas, to carry out the assassination of Abdul Gani Lone through a group, headed by Abu Hadeed. It's little tidbits like this that can establish that the Jamiat is a level up from Lashkar. They can also show the pitfalls of drawing intelligence conclusions based on small amounts of information. Since tasking flows down the chain of command, and reporting flows up, Lashkar and Jaish-e-Mohammad would probably correspond to independent battalions or brigades within the overall structure. An alternative interpretation would simply be a "contract" between Jamiat and Lashkar for specific missions. Shamas was previously identified as Jamiat's operations officer, however, which might indicate the entire operation to be Jamiat's and the equation to Lashkar a product of the Indian papers. A previous report seems to have nailed Abu Hadid as a Lashkar man, though, and if the terminal he was talking too was indeed on the Pak side, it would seem to indicate that the independent battalion or brigade interpretation is the correct one. The Indos would have the actual relationships worked out in detail â given six months worth of radio traffic logs the structure couldn't be hidden. Instruction to eliminate Lone had been given to Abu Hadeed by Abu Shamas, while hiding in Rajwar Forests in Kupwara in north Kashmir. Hadeed was also advised not to own the responsibility of the killing publicly besides supporting the call of strike in protest, according to the intercepts. "Colonel" Abu Shamas is one of Jamiat's district commanders. The security forces came upon the information when Hadeed was apprising his bosses in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir about the killing through Khaber communication station on Kalia Pahad. The intercepts reveal that some Laskhar commanders in PoK were annoyed about the attack but Hadeed explained to them that he had operated on the instructions from Abu Shamas. Hadeed had been specially deputed from Sopore [on the Pak side of the Line of Control] to Srinagar by Shamas a month earlier to assist Abu Raheel in the task of killing of Hurriyat leader. While quoting from the radio interceptions, the officer informed, that Abu Hadeed was present at the funeral procession of Abdul Gani Lone on May 22 all the way to the graveyard situated in the old city. So they bumped him off and then had the gall to go to the funeral? |
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India-Pakistan |
Indos say Lashkar-e-Taiba behind Lone hit |
2002-05-23 |
Pakistan-based terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba is behind the killing of senior Hurriyat Conference leader Abdul Gani Lone, official Indian sources said. Quoting messages from across the border intercepted by security agencies, the sources said the intercepted conversation between one Abu Hadid operating in Srinagar and a control station of LET in Pakistan revealed it was Hadid who was responsible for the killing of 70-year-old Lone. So there we have it, assuming this isn't just a propaganda drop. |
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India-Pakistan |
VHP thug slaps Hurriyat leader around |
2002-04-02 |
Lone was being interviewed in the lobby of a Jammu hotel when he was repeatedly slapped and pushed by the VHP leader. "You are anti-Indian. Your people are responsible for killing Hindus in Jammu," Maharaj shouted as he struck Lone several times despite the presence of armed police. The Shiv Sena leader began pushing Lone when the latter had finished his press conference at a hotel in Jammu and was talking to television crews. The Shiv Sena leader kept calling Lone a traitor. Lone's personal security guard tried to intervene but he was stopped by Maharaj's security officers. Lone said he was not going to register a formal complaint. "These people have no sense. They are the same thugs from Gujarat. I pray to God that he gives them some sense. I do not want to take any action against him. I am not sure who is behind this," said Abdul Gani Lone. Most of us would agree with Lone, who seems to be one of the few sensible people in Kashmir, which means he gets it from both ends of the Stupid Spectrum. Disgraceful performances appear to be a VHP stock in trade. |
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India-Pakistan |
Hurriyat's tired of foreign thugs hanging around |
2001-12-27 |
Yeah, good idea. Get rid of those out of town boys. You see how much they helped the Taliban. |
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India-Pakistan |
Foreigners give Kashmir thugs a bad name |
2001-12-31 |
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India-Pakistan |
Crazed killer/religious lunatic umbrella organization sez maybe crazed killers aren't the way to go |
2002-01-04 |
Hmmm. Interesting development. They could simply be stepping out of the path of an on-coming bus. Trouble is, if they work something out, someone else will ignore it, tarring them with the same duplicitous brush. And if they were to work out something that was actually enforceable, someone will shoot them. Crazed killers don't agree... See what we mean? |
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