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India-Pakistan
Former PIA engineer given 10 years’ imprisonment for funding Safoora carnage
2017-08-06
[DAWN] An antiterrorism court on Friday sentenced a former engineer of Pakistain International Airlines to 10 years’ imprisonment for financing the Safoora Goth bus carnage.

Khalid Yusuf Bari was found guilty of funding the carnage in which 47 Shia Ismaili community members, including eight women, were rubbed out in an attack on their bus near Safoora Goth on May 13, 2015.

The ATC-VI judge also imposed a fine of Rs100,000 on him and in case of default the convict would have to undergo an additional six months in prison.

According to the prosecution, the Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) of police had tossed in the slammer
Book 'im, Mahmoud!
Khalid in September 2015 for providing funds to Saad Aziz alias Tin Tin, one of the convicts in the Safoora Goth bus carnage case.

Paperwork was started but nothing else was done against the accused under Section 11-H (fundraising for terrorism) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 at the CTD cop shoppe.

The jail authorities produced Khalid before the judge on Friday. Following the pronouncement of the verdict, the court sent him to jail along with conviction warrant to serve out the awarded sentence.

The military court had sentenced Saad Aziz, Tahir Minhas, Asadur Rehman, Mohammad Azhar Ishrat and Hafiz Nasir Ahmed to death in May 2016 in the Safoora Goth carnage and several other cases of terrorism including assassination'>assassination of social activist Sabeen Mahmud.

The military courts had acquitted former Fishermen Cooperative Society vice chairman Sultan Qamar Siddiqui, his brother Hussain Qamar Siddiqui and Sajid Naeem of the charges of facilitating the Safoora Goth carnage.
Link


India-Pakistan
Death sentences of five terrorists upheld
2016-08-22
[DAWN] The military appellate court has upheld the death sentences of five convicts in the Safoora Goth carnage and Sabeen Mahmud murder cases.

The Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) on May 12 had announced the confirmation of the death sentences to the five ’hardcore terrorists’ - Tahir Minhas, Saad Aziz, Asadur Rehman, Mohammad Azhar Ishrat and Hafiz Nasir Ahmed - in nine cases of terrorism, including the Safoora Goth carnage and the Sabeen Mahmud murder cases.

The convicts had challenged the death sentences in the military appellate court in June through their counsel, Hashmat Ali Habib.

As per the prosecution, Minhas was the criminal mastermind of the Safoora Goth carnage in which 47 members of the Shia Ismaili community were killed in an attack on their bus in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
on May 13, 2015.

The federal government in March this year transferred the cases to the military courts established under the 21st Amendment to the Constitution.

According to the investigation, Minhas killed the Ismaili community members to impress the leadership of the bad boy Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(IS) group and secure an important position for himself in the terrorist network.

The investigation claimed that Minhas operated his own network of local faceless myrmidons but was fed up with divisions in the Taliban groups and wanted to join the IS. For this purpose, he developed contacts with the local leadership of the IS. His brother-in-law Umer alias Jalal was also operating a group of Al Qaeda network in Karachi. Minhas advised Jalal to join the IS but he refused, saying he had sworn allegiance in the hand of the late Osama bin Laden
... who is now beyond all cares and woe...
.
Link


India-Pakistan
ISIS inspired militant held for Safoora Goth bus attack
2016-03-26
KARACHI: A suspected militant, who was educated enough to get a job in a multinational company, has been taken into custody for his alleged involvement in the Safoora Goth bus carnage and rights activist Sabeen Mahmud murder cases, sources said on Thursday.

They said that an intelligence agency arrested Ali Rehman alias Toona, an engineer by profession and an accomplice of Saad Aziz, the prime suspect in the two cases, in a raid in Punjab, where he had been hiding after the May 2015 Safoora bus carnage.

Police declared him an absconder in the charge-sheet in both the Safoora carnage and Sabeen Mahmud murder cases and an antiterrorism court had also issued his non-bailable arrest warrants.

Rehman’s name first emerged after the Sindh police’s Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) detected the group responsible for the Safoora carnage and arrested several suspects in Karachi. CTD official Raja Umer Khattab had told a press conference that the group was ‘inspired’ by the ideology of the militant Islamic State group.

According to the sources, suspect Rehman came in contact with Saad Aziz, a business graduate from the prestigious Institute of Business Administration, when the latter started working in the same multinational firm, Unilever Pakistan, where he was working as an engineer. Soon they became close friends.

A Unilever Pakistan spokesperson could not be reached despite several attempts.

Rehman along with suspect Aziz did a recee to target rights activist Mahmud. They attended one of the programmes organised at Sabeen Mahmud’s The Second Floor (T2F) cafe and could be seen in a photograph taken on the occasion.

“Ali Rehman was directly involved in the killing of Sabeen Mahmud,” said a security official, who wished not to be named.

Ms Mahmud was shot dead near the Defence Library when she along with her mother was returning home in her car after organising a seminar about the Balochistan issue in April 2015.

Later, her driver, an eyewitness to the killing, was also gunned down in the metropolis.

Regarding his involvement in the Safoora carnage, the sources said that although he did not take part in the massacre he was among the group of militants that planned and carry out the attack.

He was among several suspects who reached the spot on their motorbikes. Rehman did not enter the bus to carry out the shooting, a source said, adding that after accomplishing their mission he along with the killers escaped on their motorbikes.

Around 45 Shia Ismaili community members, including 18 women, were killed and eight others sustained wounds in an armed attack on their bus near Safoora Goth on May 13, 2015.

Later, Sindh Chief Minister Syed Qaim Ali Shah announced the arrest of four suspected militants — Saad Aziz, Hafiz Nasir, Mohammad Azhar and Tahir Minhas — and claimed that Saad Aziz masterminded the Safoora attack as well as the killing of Sabeen Mahmud.

Both cases have been transferred from antiterrorism courts to a military court and the suspects are also in the custody of army authorities.

Published in Dawn, March 25th, 2016
Link


India-Pakistan
18 cases being sent to military courts for trial
2015-12-27
[DAWN] The Sindh government is set to send 18 cases, including the Safoora Goth bus carnage and Sabeen Mahmud murder cases, to military courts for trial, it emerged on Saturday.

The remaining cases are against five suspects of the bus carnage, killing of coppers, attempted murder and carrying of explosive substances and unlicensed weapons.

On an application of the provincial authorities, the Sindh High Court through a letter informed the Sindh government that the chief justice had acceded to its request to transfer the cases and custody of the accused persons to military courts.

The cases have been pending trial before two antiterrorism courts of Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
and the SHC also directed the trial court judges to hand over the original files of the cases to the authorities concerned for trial in military courts.

The provincial authorities had sent the cases to the federal government for scrutiny and approval for trial in military courts and on Dec 9 the latter approved 18 cases.

Parliament passed in January the 21st constitutional amendment to establish the military courts after the massacre in the Army Public School, Beautiful Downtown Peshawar
...capital of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (formerly known as the North-West Frontier Province), administrative and economic hub for the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. Peshawar is situated near the eastern end of the Khyber Pass, convenient to the Pak-Afghan border. Peshawar has evolved into one of Pakistan's most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities, which means lots of gunfire.
, in December last year. Around 15 cases from Sindh have already been sent to military courts.

Meanwhile,
...back at the alley, Slats grabbed for his rosco...
the provincial home department also sought record and proceedings/original files and case properties from the prosecutors of ATC- VI & VII, where the cases are pending for further action.

Around 45 Shia Ismaili community members, including 18 women, were killed and eight others maimed in an armed attack on their bus near Safoora Goth on May 13.

Tahir Hussain Minhas, alias Sain, a construction entrepreneur, and the alleged criminal mastermind of the bus attack, Saad Aziz, alias Tin Tin, a business graduate alleged to have filmed the brutal attack, and Asad-ur-Rehman, alias Malik, who allegedly backed up the attackers, have been charge-sheeted for their direct involvement in the bus carnage case.

Hafiz Nasir, alias Yasir, and Mohammad Azhar Ishrat, alias Majid, were named for allegedly providing accommodation, funds and reconnaissance to the main suspects. Fishermen Cooperative Society vice chairman Sultan Qamar Siddiqui, his brother Hussain Umar Siddiqui and Sajid Naeem were also nominated for allegedly providing weapons to the assailants.

The police also named around 10 absconders in the case, including arms dealer Zahid Abdul Qadir, alias Zahid Motiwala, and placed over 100 prosecution witnesses, including around 10 eyewitnesses, in the final investigation report and contended that two of the detained suspects disclosed their affiliation with the Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
myrmidon group.

The report further said that as per the investigation, the JIT report and other documentary record, all the suspects remained associated with Al-Qaeda and following its split they became part of IS.

Saad Aziz with his absconding accomplices has also been booked for allegedly killing Sabeen Mahmud, social media campaigner and human rights
When they're defined by the state or an NGO they don't mean much...
activist, when she with her mother was returning home after holding a seminar.

The other cases being sent to military courts are against Tahir, Saad, Asad, Nasir and Azhar related to the killing of coppers, an attempted murder, and keeping illicit weapons and kaboom.
Link


India-Pakistan
Safoora Goth, Sabeen Mahmud cases transferred to military courts
2015-12-12
[DAWN] KARACHI: The Ministry of Interior has approved the transfer and trial of 18 cases, including the Safoora Goth massacre and the murder of Sabeen Mahmud, to military courts.

Sources told Dawn the interior ministry has sanctioned 18 cases of Sindh for trial "strictly as per law under the Army Act 1952, as amended".

The suspects to be tried in military courts are namely, Saad Aziz, Tahir Hussain Minhas, Asad Rehman, Hafiz Nasir Ahmed, Azhar Ishrat, Sultan Qumar Siddiqui, Hussain Umer Siddiqui, Naeem Sajid and Hafiz Umer.

The cases were earlier referred to the federal interior ministry by the home department of the provincial government.

Saad Aziz is among the prime suspects in both the Safoora Goth carnage and the murder of rights activist Sabeen Mahmud.

In October, an antiterrorism court was informed that due to security concerns, the trial of the Safoora Goth bus carnage case would be conducted inside the central prison.

The home department through a notification had informed the ATC-I that the trial of the suspects would be conducted inside the prison because of security reasons.

Sindh police in August had planned to send 35 cases of terrorist activities allegedly carried out by Safoora Goth bus attack suspects, believed to be local operatives of self-styled Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
, to military courts, official sources say.

The Sindh police had decided to 're-examine' all terrorism-related cases on the basis of severity of the crime before recommending them to the home department in the wake of Supreme Court decision in favour of military courts.

Safoora Goth massacre
Saad Aziz alias Tin Tin, Tahir Hussain Minhas alias Sain, Asad-ur-Rehman alias Malik, Hafiz Nasir alias Yasir and Mohammad Azhar Ishrat alias Majid are facing trial for their involvement in the killing of 45 Ismaili community members, including 18 women, in a assassination on a bus near Safoora Goth on May 13.

At least 43 people were killed and 13 others maimed when gunnies opened fire inside a bus carrying members of the Ismaili community near Safoora Chowk in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
.

The gunnies used 9mm pistols in the massacre, and managed to flee after the attack.

Sabeen Mahmud's murder
Earlier in April this year, prominent rights activist and co-founder and director of The Second Floor (T2F), Sabeen Mahmud was rubbed out by unidentified gunnies in Karachi.

Sabeen, accompanied by her mother, left T2F after 9pm and was on her way home when she was shot by unidentified gunnies in Defence Phase-II, sources confirmed. She died on her way to the hospital. Doctors said they retrieved five bullets from her body.

Her mother also sustained bullet wounds and was said to be at death's door, but survived the wounds.
Link


India-Pakistan
Ex-PIA official sent to prison in terror financing case
2015-11-01
[Dawn] KARACHI: An antiterrorism court remanded on Friday a former engineer of the Pakistain International Airlines in judicial custody in a case pertaining to financing an act of terrorism.

The Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) of police had tossed in the slammer
Youse'll never take me alive coppers!... [BANG!]... Ow!... I quit!
Khalid Yusuf Bari, former PIA engineer, on Sept 21 in Baloch Colony and booked him for allegedly funding the Safoora Goth bus carnage.

The CTD produced the suspect in court upon the expiration of his physical remand, and ATC-III Judge Saleem Raza Baloch sent him to prison on judicial remand till Nov 6.

The judge directed the investigation officer to submit the investigation report on the next date.

Paperwork was started but nothing else was done against the suspect under Section 11-H (fundraising for terrorism) of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997 at the Baloch Colony cop shoppe.

Tahir Hussain Minhas alias Sain, Saad Aziz alias Tin Tin, Asad-ur-Rehman alias Malik, Hafiz Nasir alias Yasir and Muhammad Azhar Ishrat alias Majid have been booked and arrested for allegedly killing 45 people of the Shia Ismaili community in an armed attack on their bus near Safoora Goth on May 13.

Several suspects are being investigated for allegedly facilitating the assailants by providing funds, weapons, transport and accommodation.

Remand extended
The same court extended the police remand of a suspect for allegedly financing terrorism.

The CTD arrested Sheeba Ahmed, said to be a former employee of the Pakistain Air Force and associated with a religious organization, in Defence on Sept 21 for financing the Safoora Goth bus carnage suspects and also funding the Al Qaeda in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS).

The police produced the suspect in court and sought an extension in his custody for further questioning. The court extended the remand for a couple of weeks by granting the police request.

The suspect is associated with some chemicals business in Pakistain and neighbouring countries.
Link


India-Pakistan
Two detained for financing Safoora Goth bus carnage
2015-10-18
[DAWN] KARACHI: Two suspects belonging to the business community were placed under 90-day preventive detention on Saturday for allegedly financing the attackers who killed 45 Shia Ismaili community members, including 18 women, in a bus near Safoora Goth.

The counter-terrorism department (CTD) of police informed an antiterrorism court about the three-month detention of the two suspects, Mohammad Saleem and SLearned Elders of Islamn, belonging to the business community of Punjabi Saudagaran.

The CTD claimed to have jugged
Youse'll never take me alive coppers!... [BANG!]... Ow!... I quit!
the two suspected financiers on Oct 16. In an application, the police informed Judge Saleem Raza Baloch of the ATC-III that the suspects had been placed under the preventive detention for an inquiry as provided under Section 11-EEEE of the Anti-Terrorism Act, 1997.

In compliance with Section 11 EEEE (3) of the ATA, the detainees were produced along with their detention orders and jail warrants for the information of the court, they added.

Earlier, Fishermen Cooperative Society vice chairman Sultan Qamar Siddiqui, his brother Hussain Qamar Siddiqui and Sajid Naeem had also been booked for allegedly facilitating the deadly attack.

The Pakistain Rangers had detained the FCS vice chairman and other officials in June for three months for an inquiry and he was handed over to police just last month in the bus carnage case.

The police produced the three suspects before an ATC-I on Oct 16 and sought further extension in their custody on the ground that investigation was still under way. The court had allowed 10-day extension in their physical remand, but expressed displeasure over lack of progress in the investigation against the detained suspects despite being in police custody for a month and directed the police to come up with a progress report on next hearing.

Saad Aziz alias Tin Tin, Tahir Hussain Minhas alias Sain, Asad-ur-Rehman alias Malik, Hafiz Nasir alias Yasir and Mohammad Azhar Ishrat alias Majid have already been charge-sheeted for killing the 45 people, including many women, in the assassination on their bus near Safoora Goth on May 13.
Link


India-Pakistan
IS-inspired militants behind Safoora carnage, Sabeen Mahmud murder
2015-07-02
[DAWN] KARACHI: Militants involved in the deadly Safoora Goth massacre and the murder of prominent social activist Sabeen Mahmud were inspired by the self-styled Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
, said a top counter-terrorism official of Sindh police on Wednesday.

"The accused murderous Moslems established their own group in 2014 but they did not name it," said Raja Umer Khattab, an official of Counter-Terrorism Department (CTD) of the Sindh police.

"This group was inspired by the ideology and terror activities of groups such as self-styled Islamic State and wanted to establish an affiliation with them," added the CTD official while speaking at presser.

Khattab further added that Tahir alias Minhas alias Sain and Jalal were members of al Qaeda in 2014, but later developed differences over funding and other organizational matters. Later, Tahir established his own group while Jalal remained associated with Al Qaeda.

"It is possible that Jalal's group was recently involved in the murder of two DSPs, one SP and several other police officials," added Khattab.

He revealed that the JIT's (Joint Investigation Team) investigation has been completed. Other accused in the Safoora carnage are Saad Aziz, Hafiz Nasir Ahmed, Mohammad Azhar Ishrat and Asad Rehman.

Also read: Attack on Debra Lobo: Eye-witness identifies Saad Aziz as main shooter

A polygraph test conducted by an expert, corroborated the confession of the accused regarding involvement in over two dozen gunnies attacks.

Responding to a question, Raja Umer Khattab said he could not rule out the possibility of links between murderous Moslems led by Jalal and India's spy agency Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) or any other foreign intelligence agency
Link


India-Pakistan
Nine Safoora carnage assailants still at large
2015-06-08
[DAWN] KARACHI: The disclosure at a meeting on Saturday that nine of the total 14 assailants who killed 45 people of the Shia Ismaili community in the Safoora bus carnage are still on the lam set alarm bells ringing and prompted the Sindh police chief to assign the task of their arrest to a five-member committee.

Five suspects -- Tahir Hussain Minhas, Saad Aziz, Hafiz Nasir alias Yasir, Mohammad Azhar Ishrat and Asad-ur-Rehman -- are already in police custody for allegedly targeting the innocent people, including women, in an armed attack on a community bus near Safoora Goth on May 13.

Sources said that Inspector General of Police Ghulam Hyder Jamali chaired a meeting at the Central Police Office where he was informed that total 14 assailants took part in the attack and nine of them were still absconding.

The IGP formed a high-powered committee and also directed the city police to ensure extraordinary security measures at all public places, government/semi-government buildings, foreign missions and also provide full security cover to 'vulnerable communities'.

The sources said that the five-member committee would be headed by the DIG-East and comprise the SSP of the Special Investigation Unit, the SSP-East, the SSP-Investigation (Malir) and an official of the Counter Terrorism Department.

A police front man also confirmed the formation of the committee by the IGP.

The meeting was told that two Kalashnikovs, three 9mm pistols, two cars and four cycle of violences -- all used in the Safoora carnage -- had been seized on leads provided by the five held suspects. Seven laptop computers and half a kilo poisonous substance was also seized from them.

DIG-East Munir Sheikh told Dawn that the bully boy group consisted of total 30 bully boyz and 14 of them had actually taken part in the bus attack.

'Held suspects involved in 37 terrorism cases'

Speaking at a presser at the CPO, DIG-South Dr Jamil Ahmed said that the five suspects also "confessed to their involvement" in 37 terrorism cases in Bloody Karachi
...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous...
and Hyderabad.

Of the 37 cases, 33 acts of terrorism were carried out in different areas of Karachi and four in Hyderabad.

Some of these cases pertained to killing of human rights
...which are usually entirely different from personal liberty...
activist Sabeen Mahmud, armed attack on American academic Dr Debra Lobo, attack on the Bohra community in Hyderabad and kaboom on worshippers belonging to the Bohra community in Karachi's Aram Bagh area and killings of a number of coppers.

Talking to Dawn, Karachi police chief Ghulam Qadir Thebo said that the five-member body would not only be responsible for the arrest of the absconders but it would also investigate and legally pursue the cases against the held suspects.
Link


India-Pakistan
The Khaki Fidayeen
2010-01-16
As gunfire crackled in the snowscaped Srinagar chill of early January, with two fidayeen fighters--wholly rolled, strapped and sold to their 'cause'--holding Lal Chowk's Punjab Hotel under seige, a handful of Kashmir's police officers were overcome with déjà vu. And itchy fingers, that burning need to be there as part of the operation, countering terror with all they've got. Equally if not more dedicated to India's own cause, the legitimate cause of Peace in the Valley, these men in khaki are clear they have what it takes--if only the government would deploy them. Back in 1989, when the insurgency broke out, the J&K Police was ill-equipped to handle it; some policemen were even suspected of sympathy with insurgents. Today, the force actually has police officers trained in counter-terrorism. Most of them are Kashmiri Muslims, and when they say they would've wrapped up the 26/11 job in just ten hours, it doesn't sound like an empty boast. They're India's Khaki Fidayeen. Open profiles five such policemen. They've already helped steady things in J&K, and are raring for action...

JAVID AHMED

Inspector

The information was soild, "Ek dum pukhta," as the informer told Inspector Javid Ahmed. A militant had been spotted inside a college in Shopian in south Kashmir. There was no time to lose. Javid and his three men rushed immediately--as the inspector recounts.

At the college ground, Javid saw a young man near a motorcycle. As Javid approached, the young man pulled out a grenade. Unfazed, Javid jumped at him, even as two of his own men ran away. "I held his hands tightly in mine while he tried hard to pull the pin," says Javid. The third policeman, who hadn't fled, stood paralysed with fear while Javid's fight went on. It lasted for almost five long minutes before Javid finally managed to loosen the militant's hands. The grenade landed on a road nearby, beyond the college wall, but luckily did not explode.

If Javid has a charmed life, he'd rather not test it so brazenly again. "I have promised myself that I won't act so brave again," he says.

Javid comes from a policeman's family. His father was once in charge of the Tral police station in south Kashmir, a post which he has since taken charge of. During the peak of militancy in Jammu & Kashmir (J&K), it was common for policemen and their families to get threats from militants. Javid's father got many such threats, and even survived a landmine blast.

Javid's first posting after graduating from the J&K police academy in 2002 was in Shopian, a Jamaat-e-Islami stronghold and thus a tough challenge. According to a senior police officer, militancy here reigned until mid-2000; the police feared for their lives and dared not take action. Javid, however, would have none of it, vowing to resist militants every turn of the way. "From day one, I had vowed to eliminate militancy," he says.

In some four years, Javid led operation after operation in Shopian, resulting in the elimination of at least 25 top militant leaders, including the Lashkar-e-Toiba's deputy district commander. "Wherever I am, I will keep fighting militancy, no matter what," he says.

IMTIYAZ HUSSAIN

Superintendent of Police

The man opened fire the moment Police Officer Imtiyaz Hussain asked him who he was. "Tu kaun hai?" Hussain remembers shouting at the man sitting under an apple tree. It was an orchard in north Kashmir's Sopore.

Hussain had his eyes fixed on the figure in the distance when he suddenly saw metal glisten in the bright afternoon sun. Instead of revealing who he was, the mystery man, Abu Abdullah, had pulled out an AK-47 rifle. The police officer could have died that very instant had it not been for his namesake, Constable Imtiyaz Ahmed, who jumped in front of his boss and took the AK-47's bullets in his lower abdomen.

Abu Abdullah was no ordinary gunman. He was a hardcore Lashkar terrorist, sent to carry out a fidayeen attack in Srinagar. It was just hours before he was to head for the state capital that Hussain, who was then Sopore's superintendent of police, got a whiff of his plans. At the encounter in the orchard, Abdullah had fought fiercely, so fiercely that he wouldn't let the police party rescue Imtiyaz Ahmed, who lay wounded in the line of fire. Shards of apples flew in all directions.

It took Hussain an hour to get near Abdullah. And then he shot Abdullah dead from a one-foot distance. "I tilted his rifle away from myself and shot him with my pistol," recounts Imtiyaz. But Constable Ahmed, sadly, couldn't be saved.

Hussain belongs to the 1999 batch of the J&K Police. "It is called the fidayeen batch," he quips. He joined as a deputy superintendent of police in Shopian, in south Kashmir, which was then the region's hotbed of militancy. But it was from 2006 onwards in Sopore that Hussain faced the most difficult phase of his career.

At that time, Sopore was the hub of terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba. Most fidayeen attacks which took place in Srinagar would be orchestrated from Sopore. Hussain's main objective was containing the Lashkar. Unless the police sent out a strong message by instilling the fear of death in militants, he felt, it wouldn't be possible to contain militancy. His big moment came in November 2006, when he successfully managed to bump off Osama Pehalwan, chief of the militant outfit Al-Mansurian. Pehalwan had led a string of attacks against the Indian Army.

In another daring operation, Hussain recalls scalping senior Lashkar commander Hafiz Nasir. On an informer's cue, Hussain and team zeroed in on the militant hiding along with two Jaish operatives in Rafiabad, near Sopore; the three were planning a fidayeen attack on the cavalcade of then J&K Chief Minister Mufti Mohammed Sayeed, according to intelligence inputs. As the team lay siege, Hussain, who was accompanied on the operation by an Army colonel, was instructed by his seniors to rush to a site where the CM was supposed to address a public rally. But once he left, the militants broke out of the cordon. Two Army soldiers were killed, and Hafiz Nasir took refuge in another house. Hussain was called right back. He was in favour of blasting the house, but the colonel wanted to be sure--and took a peep inside. Nasir shot him. "He died on the spot," says Hussain. It was only afterwards that he and his police team managed to kill Nasir.

In another input from Rafiabad, an informer told Hussain that four militants were hiding inside a house. Hussain says he sent a police party thrice into the house for a search, but the militants could not be found. Finally, when the informer called a fourth time, Hussain lost his patience, calling the informer a liar. "Cut my throat if you don't get them," the informer whispered.

This time round, Hussain accompanied the search party himself. They searched the entire house. But, like three previous attempts, Hussain couldn't find anything. He was about to call it off when he spotted a black-and-white TV set in one corner of the house. "I don't know," he says, "but I had this gut feeling that there is something there." The police officer ordered his men to dig beneath the TV set. Even after a couple of feet, they found only earth.

Sure enough, there were four militants holed up inside. Hussain asked them to surrender. They wouldn't. "Finally, we got it filled with water," says Hussain.
"Sir, there is nothing here," one of his men told him. But Hussain insisted that they keep digging. After a foot or so, they came upon another layer of concrete. And beneath it, they discovered a bunker, measuring 6 feet by 8 feet. Sure enough, there were four militants holed up inside. Hussain asked them to surrender. They wouldn't.

"Finally, we got it filled with water," says Hussain, almost cringing at the memory. It was in a similar manner that Hussain and his men were able to eliminate Sajjad Afghani, the J&K chief of terrorist outfit Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, in 2008. Afghani was hiding above a false ceiling in the residential quarters of a government hospital employee, and had been an active militant for ten years in north Kashmir. Hussain knew. "Many Pakistani boys work for us," he discloses, "providing us vital information about militant activities in Kashmir." He has also intercepted many calls from across the border, asking militants to kill certain people. "I have saved the life of at least a hundred people by shifting them to safe places."

It is on a Sunday that Hussain, a legend in these parts, finally finds time for Open. His bulletproof vehicle has broken down recently. This puts his life in danger. But there are also other hardships he must put up with in daily life. For example, he stays in rented, not police, accommodation.

The rewards are meagre. Police officers in J&K rue the fact that the men who risk their lives get a pittance as allowances--Rs 200 as risk allowance is all that a policeman gets. Compared to that, an Army soldier gets Rs 5,000 per month as risk allowance. So, at a time when so many young men of his age were crossing the border to join militant outfits, how did Hussain choose the police? "Three of our boys died in an encounter... and a militant from Multan also. Tell me, will a Kashmiri mother cry for her three boys or for a militant from Multan?" is his succinct response.

The superintendent gets a call on his mobile. And it is then that I recognise his caller tune. It's a song from a 1965 film on Bhagat Singh's life: 'Eiy watan, eiy watan, humko teri kasam, teri raahon mein jaan tak luta jaayenge...'

MOHAMMED IRSHAD

Superintendent of Police

When the fidayeen entered Punjab Hotel in the heart of Srinagar last week, one man was immediately summoned: Mohammed Irshad. Till recently the SP, Special Operations Group, he is a reclusive man who lets his personal weapon do the talking. And true to his reputation, Irshad's team eliminated both fidayeen fighters in a few short hours. "We drilled holes from the wooden roof, shielding ourselves behind iron plates and then shot them," he says.

Today, the very mention of cargo (Irshad's erstwhile office was in a building that had housed the cargo section of Indian Airlines) is enough to send shivers across the spines of militants. Inside his office, the first thing that strikes you is a big map of Kashmir. Pinned across the map are names of top militant commanders. Some of them, crossed out. Eliminated. Irshad, clearly, brooks no nonsense. His first posting was in the militant-crawling Doda region, where he is believed to have wiped out most Hizbul cadre. "Once he achieved that, the Lashkar couldn't sustain itself there in the absence of Hizbul support," says a senior police officer and colleague.

Modus operandi? In the Valley, Irshad forged a reliable network of informers, some of whom even had the guts to infiltrate militant ranks."We have our men in every tanzeem (outfit)," says Irshad. Like all other officers who dared take militants head on, Irshad has had his share of near-death experiences. Once, during an encounter in Telbal, two Lashkar militants jumped out of a window of their first-floor hideout, into a street behind where Irshad and another senior police officer were standing. The militants fired a volley of bullets which they escaped by ducking to the ground. The militants killed five police personnel and injured three others.

Irshad and his men chased them, and one of them was taken down just 2 km away from the original encounter site. "The other died in another encounter, two months later," reports Irshad.

The superintendent also remembers a search operation in the Bandipora area, where, acting on specific information about militants inside a house, they laid siege to it. On entering it, they couldn't find any. An exhausted Irshad sat with another officer on a box for almost 15 minutes, discussing what to do.

Finally, they left the building, calling off the operation. It was five days later that a militant was caught, and he revealed that he was hiding in a bunker beneath that very box all that while. "He said he was about to fire at us, but I walked away at that very moment," recounts Irshad.

Irshad does not share details of his work with his family. "Most of the time, they don't know what I have been up to, but sometimes they come to know of it through media reports."

"And then they get worried."

AFADUL MUJTABA

Senior Superintendent of Police

At first sight, Afadul Mujtaba doesn't look like a policeman. He looks more like a rich carpet dealer. But ask the separatist leadership of Kashmir, and you will hear what this man is made of. As SSP, Srinagar, Mujtaba once stirred up a fiery debate in the Valley by citing the Hadith (passed-down accounts of the Prophet Muhammad's sayings), arguing that pelting stones was un-Islamic. Such unruly mob behaviour has always been a big headache for the police, with disgruntled youth using the slightest provocation to gather at various spots in the city and turn bricks and stones into missiles (veteran mobsters could even injure cops by hurling flat stones through the cracks of their cane shields). But after Mujtaba made his Hadith reference, the separatist leadership found itself divided. Some of them agreed with Mujtaba, while others argued that stone pelting was the only weapon of the weak. It even prompted a senior separatist leader to hold a seminar on the issue.

But Mujtaba didn't leave it at that. Sources talk of his novel methods to corner some of the regular stone pelters. Under one such plan, he asked some of his plainclothes men to blend in with stone pelters, but equipped with Bluetooth hands-free mobile kits. As they joined the pelting, the undercover cops led some of them towards the police cordon. Once close, the plainclothes policemen turned on the stone pelters, pushing them towards their trap lying in wait.

Plus, Mujtaba has also been part of some of the police's fiercest encounters with militants. His colleagues swear by his agility during such high-risk operations in the Valley. He has handled many that involved terrorists on deadly suicide missions. Mujtaba himself keeps a low profile, reluctant to discuss his feats with anyone. "I am just doing my job," he says, with a smile which disappears in a second.

AASHIQ BUKHARI

Assistant Inspector General

Budgam district is the first militant-free district of Kashmir. There was a time when there were more than 200 'most wanted' militants operating in this area. Most of them were done for once Aashiq Bukhari took over the reins of the police in the district. Once posted, he lost no time in leading extensive operations against militancy, and with undaunted energy.

In one such operation, the police managed to catch a bus-load of arms coming from the bordering town of Kupwara. In another search operation, they discovered three truckloads of liquid explosives hidden in a bunker (its hatch hidden under a commode) in the Chanapora locality. "We got that damn house blasted," says Bukhari.

He has been instrumental in the killing of about 300 militants. Some top militants were even given instructions to bump off the brave police officer. One of them was a dreaded Pakistani militant married to a local woman, Ali, who was later killed by Bukhari's men.

None of the assassins could get him. "The Army is for the borders," he says, "It is only the local police which can deal with militancy." He is also against what he calls the "sarkari goondaism" (official hooliganism) of the Army. "The soldiers in the Army convoys carry these long bamboo poles and threaten people moving around. This alienates people further and creates hatred for the man in uniform," says Bukhari, shaking his head. "But, of course, the militant always fires the first shot." He fires right back.
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Afghanistan/South Asia
Four given death for Rawalpindi mosque firing
2004-12-10
An anti-terrorism court on Thursday sentenced four people to death for firing at a mosque in Rawalpindi, killing 11 worshippers and injuring 14. Fazle Hamid, Habibullah Mujahid, Tahir Mahmood alias Commando and Hafiz Nasir Ahmed were sentenced to death for firing at Shah Najaf mosque near Khyban-e-Sir Syed in Pirwadhai in 2002. The court also fined them Rs 500,000 each. Another suspect Qari Ashraf was sentenced to seven years in rigorous imprisonment and fined Rs 50,000. Four suspects, Mujibur Rehman, Muhammad Sohail, Muhammad Abdullah and Mubarik Hussain were acquitted by the court.
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