Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Army foils infiltrati­on bid, four held Farooq Abdullah engages former solicitorg­eneral for Art 35A case

- Ashiq Hussain letters@hindustant­imes.com Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

CRACKDOWN Army says newly recruited militants were nabbed while trying to cross into POK, three Al Badr terrorists escaped ONE OF THE MILLITANTS WAS PURSUING MBA WHILE ANOTHER IS A DIPLOMA HOLDER IN OT MANAGEMENT

SRINAGAR: Four newly enlisted militants allegedly trying to cross into Pakistan occupied Kashmir (POK) were held while their three guides escaped in North Kashmir’s Kalaroos on Sunday.

Army spokesman Colonel Rajesh Kalia said the four were held after they were tipped off about the plans of three Al Badr terrorists to guide the four across the LOC. “The army, in a joint operation with police, laid an ambush and trapped the terrorists,” he said. The four were captured after a brief gunfight.

“Extreme restraint was exercised and an opportunit­y was given to the terrorists to surrender. While the four newly-recruited terrorists surrendere­d, the three Al Badr terrorists deserted the new recruits and fled under cover of fire,” Kalia said.

The security forces had launched a manhunt to trace the three. The four were not immediatel­y identified. But reports said they are in their early 20s and residents of North Kashmir’s Handwara. They said one of them was pursuing MBA while another is a diploma holder in operation theatre management.

There has been an increase in the number of educated local youth in the militant ranks particular­ly after Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani’s killing in 2016. They include at least two PHD scholars.

Local media reports said the four held in Kupwara district had announced they had joined militant ranks while their pictures, showing them wielding guns and pistols, had gone viral on the social media on Saturday.

The police had on Saturday said they had busted three hideouts, seized weapons and held four militant sympathise­rs from south Kashmir, where three policemen and a political worker were killed on Wednesday.

The spike in violence coincided with Satya Pal Malik’s appointmen­t as Jammu and Kashmir’s 13th governor. Malik has the state’s direct administra­tive control.

Jammu and Kashmir has been under the governor’s rule since June when the Bharatiya Janata Party withdrew support to Peoples Democratic Party-led coalition government. Malik’s immediate challenge is to hold local bodies’ elections later this year.

The elections had been delayed after the coalition government told the Centre that the situation was not conducive to hold them.

There are approximat­ely 225250 militants operating in Kashmir. About 150 of them are locals. So far, 142 militants have been killed in different encounters with security forces this year. SRINAGAR: The National Conference (NC) has engaged former solicitor-general of India, Gopal Subramaniu­m, to defend Article 35A of the Constituti­on, which has been facing a legal challenge in the Supreme Court, the party said on Sunday.

“Party president and member of Parliament from Srinagar constituen­cy, Farooq Abdullah, yesterday held detailed discussion­s with senior lawyers in Delhi in the context of petitions challengin­g the state’s special status in the Supreme Court,” an NC spokespers­on said on Sunday.

Abdullah was accompanie­d by NC provincial presidents for Kashmir and Jammu Nasir Aslam Wani and Devender Singh Rana, he added.

Subramaniu­m is a former chairman of the Bar Council of India and has been a part of numerous landmark cases.

The Article 35A, incorporat­ed i n t he Constituti­on through a 1954 Presidenti­al Order, accords special rights and privileges to the citizens of Jammu and Kashmir and denies property rights to a woman who marries a person from outside the state.

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