Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Jammu attack

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“One of the attackers, Qari Mushtaq alias Chotu, was active in Tral in south Kashmir. The two others have been identified as Mohammed Adil alias Irfan Bhai, who was operating in Sopore and Pulwama sectors, and Mohammed Khalid Khan alias Rashid Bhai, who was also active in Pulwama,” said the central security official, who asked not to be named.

Jammu & Kashmir’s police chief SP Vaid said the militants may have been helped with reconnaiss­ance and ammunition by some local sympathise­rs.

“Informatio­n available with us suggests the attackers had crossed from Pakistan into the Kashmir Valley sometime in July-august last year,” Vaid said. “We suspect they may not have taken the risk of travelling with weapons from the Valley to Jammu. It is possible that some local supporters may have provided them with arms and ammunition. This angle is being probed,” he added.

“It looks like they cut the tin sheets to enter inside the camp from the rear through a seasonal nallah (drain),” he confirmed.

Those killed were identified as Subedar Madan Lal Choudhary, Subdebar Mohammad Ashraf Mir, Havaldar Habib-ullah Qurashi, Naik Manzoor Ahmed, Lance Naik Mohmmad Iqbal, besides the father of Lance Naik Mohammad Iqbal.

Investigat­ors have found syringes where the militants hid in the camp’s residentia­l quarters before the attack. Suicide attackers have been known to take shots of morphine before launching attacks.

J&K police officers and central security officials said there should have been better security arrangemen­ts to secure the boundary wall, especially since the camp had been attacked in 2003, suggesting it was vulnerable, and since such camps have been prime targets since the 2016 attack at a military base in Uri.

The attack was carried out in spite of a high alert in view of the fifth anniversar­y of the hanging of 2001 Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru on February 9.

A team from the NIA reached Jammu on Sunday. An MHA official said the probe is likely to be handed over to the agency. or to use it as an instrument of state policy, in an apparent reference to Pakistan.

“The two sides agreed to strengthen cooperatio­n in combating terrorism both at the bilateral level and within the multilater­al system,” said the statement.

Earlier in the day, Modi launched a project for the constructi­on of the first Hindu temple in Abu Dhabi, describing the holy place as a “catalytic agent” of harmony that will become a medium of India’s identity. He laid the foundation stone for the BAPS Swaminaray­an temple via video conferenci­ng from the Dubai Opera House.

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