Deccan Chronicle

Hawala routes help fund LoC terror

NIA working on linking money trail from Pak to separatist­s in the Valley

- RAJNISH SHARMA | DC NEW DELHI, JUNE 10

Majority of funds pumped into the Kashmir Valley for subversive activities originated from Pakistan and then routed to India through a complex web of hawala operators in Saudi Arabia, UAE and Bangladesh, investigat­ions into terror funding in the Valley being carried out by the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) has revealed.

This is the first time that any Central agency is conducting a detailed probe into funding of terror activities ever since militancy erupted in the Valley in 1990s.

In its FIR lodged, the NIA has already named Jamaat-ud-Dawa chief Hafiz Saeed as one of the main accused.

The NIA is also being assisted by the Central intelligen­ce agencies in its probe. Sources claimed that most of the funds were generated by Hafiz Saeed which were then routed in small amounts through several hawala operators into India. Most of these operators in the country are said to be operating out of Delhi, Gurgaon, Sonepat and Jammu. The NIA had carried out extensive raids in these cities last weekend.

In an attempt to cover the money trail hawala operators in India, the money was further divided into even smaller amounts and sent to a number of other dealers, sources added.

“This helped avoid any suspicion as a huge amount being sent to the Valley would have attracted attention,” an investigat­ing official said.

In an attempt to cover their tracks, these hawala dealers took extreme precaution ensuring that no records of money being sent to the Valley were maintained and most transactio­ns were noted down on a “kachi parchi” or temporary papers slips which were destroyed immediatel­y after money changed hands to next operator.

Thus, sources added, the NIA and intelligen­ce agencies were finding it difficult to link the money trail directly to the separatist leaders in the Valley. Some have already been questioned by the NIA.

The NIA though seized some mobiles, laptops, computers and pen drives which have been sent for a examinatio­n. “We are waiting for the report to see if any record of the money trail to the separatist­s was saved. But the possibilit­y seems remote as the hawala operators were instructed to destroy all records,” the official added.

SOURCES in the investigat­ing agencies claim there was a sharp increase in funding following the killing of Hizbul commander Burhan Wani by security forces last July

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