Pakistani militant linked to fidayeen attack arrested

March 15, 2013 02:07 am | Updated November 16, 2021 10:15 pm IST - SRINAGAR

Jammu and Kashmir ADGP K. Rajendra pays tributes to the five CRPF jawans who were killed in the March 13, 2013 encounter with militants at Bemina, during a ceremony in Srinagar on Thursday.

Jammu and Kashmir ADGP K. Rajendra pays tributes to the five CRPF jawans who were killed in the March 13, 2013 encounter with militants at Bemina, during a ceremony in Srinagar on Thursday.

The Special Operations Group of the Jammu and Kashmir police has arrested one of the Pakistani militants connected to Wednesday’s >fidayeen attack on a CRPF unit in Srinagar .

Senior Superintendent of Police Syed Ashiq Bukhari confirmed the arrest in the Rampura Chattabal locality of the city late Thursday night, but did not share further details.

However, another police source told The Hindu that on specific information, the militant in his late 20s, codenamed Abu Talha, was arrested with a loaded pistol during a dramatic raid. The Army and the CRPF provided cover to the SOG unit.

Police say two pocket diaries; a SIM card of an Indian telecommunication company issued in Uri, an ointment tube made in Pakistan; an under-surveillance guerilla activity controlled by a Kashmiri militant for several weeks at Palhalan village of Baramulla; the Hizbul Mujahideen’s first-ever claim of owning up a suicide attack; the Lashkar-e-Taiba spokesman’s “meaningful quiet”; no local claim on the two bodies (of the militants); besides some telephonic intercepts and call detail records pieced together by the investigators make the fidayeen attack “a clear case of foreign terror.”

“We have noticed the signature of the Lashkar-e-Taiba in this operation,” a senior official associated with the investigation told The Hindu . He refused to disclose details but was confident that a breakthrough was not far away. “An operation jointly planned and executed by the Kashmiri and Pakistani cadres of the LeT in coordination with the United Jihad Council,” he said when pressed to identify the actors.

“There were some gaps and missing links, but the militants were not completely off the radar. They had been under surveillance since we learned about their planning fidayeen attacks on the Taj and the Grand [two major hotels] last year,” another official source claimed. The militants had “some inkling” of being under the surveillance. Hence, they changed their hideouts, vehicles and means of communication. Palhalan village was the nuclear point for the planning and execution; a local militant, associated with a separatist political conglomerate, operated as the “kingpin.”

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