Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

TERROR MODULE WITH PAK LINKS BUSTED IN TARN TARAN, 4 HELD

PAK LINK Pistols, ammo, sat phones seized from operatives at Tarn Taran village; Amarinder decides to hand over probe to NIA, police suspect drones used for delivery of arms

- HT Correspond­ent letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: Punjab Police on Sunday busted a terror module of the Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF), backed by a group based in Pakistan and Germany.

Police said the terror group was conspiring to unleash a series of strikes in Punjab and adjoining states.

A huge cache of arms, including five AK-47 rifles, pistols, satellite phones and hand grenades, was seized from them. Given the internatio­nal links and ramificati­ons of the conspiracy, chief minister Amarinder Singh has decided to hand over further investigat­ion to the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), an official spokesman said.

Punjab DGP Dinkar Gupta said the four members of the module were arrested from the outskirts of Chohla Sahib village in Tarn Taran district of Punjab on Sunday.

“They were using a white-coloured Maruti Swift car bearing a Punjab registrati­on number,” Gupta said. With the initial investigat­ion revealing the use of drones to deliver weapons and communicat­ion hardware across the border, the chief minister has urged the Union government to direct the Indian Air Force (IAF) and the Border Security Force (BSF) to launch necessary counter-measures.

CHANDIGARH: Punjab Police on Sunday busted a Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF) terror module, which was conspiring to unleash a series of terror strikes in Punjab and adjoining states, by arresting four people and seizing five AK-47 rifles, pistols, satellite phones and hand grenades.

This is the biggest seizure of arms and ammunition in Punjab in a decade, Punjab DGP Dinkar Gupta said.

Taking cognisance of the seriousnes­s of the matter, chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh has decided to hand over the investigat­ions to the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) to ensure that the entire conspiracy, which has cross-border links, is unraveled expeditiou­sly.

Those arrested have been identified as Balwant Singh alias Baba alias Nihang; Akashdeep Singh alias Akash Randhawa; Harbhajan Singh and Balbir Singh. The arrests were made from Chola Sahib village in Tarn Taran on Sunday. The accused were travelling in a Maruti Swift Dzire car (PB65-X-8042). The accused have been booked by the state special operation cell (SSOC), Amritsar, under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), Arms Act, Explosive Substances Act, Prisons Act, and relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code.

The operation was led by AIG (counter intelligen­ce) Ketan Baliram Patil with the help of Punjab Police personnel from Chandigarh. Five AK-47 rifles, along with 16 magazines and 472 rounds; four China-made 30-bore pistols, along with eight magazines and 72 rounds; nine hand grenades; five Thuraya satellite phones, along with their ancillary equipment, two mobile phones, two wireless sets and ₹10 lakh in fake Indian currency were recovered from the accused. Further investigat­ions are on, police said.

Both Akashdeep and Balwant Singh have a criminal past with multiple criminal cases pending against them. Preliminar­y investigat­ions revealed that Maan Singh, who is lodged in Amritsar jail in a case lodged under the Arms Act and Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), had radicalise­d Akashdeep when they were lodged together in the prison, police said.

Recipient of the consignmen­t, Balwant Singh, is a member of Babbar Khalsa Internatio­nal (BKI) and was earlier arrested in a case registered under the UAPA and Arms Act at Mukandpur police station in SBS Nagar. He is currently out on bail.

With initial investigat­ions suggesting the use of drones to deliver weapons and communicat­ion hardware from across the border, the chief minister has also urged the central government to direct the Indian Air Force (IAF) and Border Security Force (BSF) to launch necessary counter-measures to check such activities.

DGP Dinkar Gupta said the weapons appeared to have been delivered recently from across the Indo-Pak border through drones by Jihadi and pro-Khalistan outfits with the backing of Pakistan government agencies.

It is one of the biggest recoveries of arms and ammunition in the last decade. On Friday, Punjab Police busted a pro-Khalistan module during investigat­ions into the Tarn Taran blast, but, as of now, there appears to be no link between the two modules. DINKAR GUPTA, director general of police, Punjab

 ??  ?? Five AK-47 rifles, along with 16 magazines and 472 rounds; four China-made 30-bore pistols, along with eight magazines and 72 rounds; nine hand grenades; five Thuraya satellite phones, along with their ancillary equipment, two mobile phones, two wireless sets and ₹10 lakh in fake Indian currency were recovered from the accused. HT PHOTOS
Five AK-47 rifles, along with 16 magazines and 472 rounds; four China-made 30-bore pistols, along with eight magazines and 72 rounds; nine hand grenades; five Thuraya satellite phones, along with their ancillary equipment, two mobile phones, two wireless sets and ₹10 lakh in fake Indian currency were recovered from the accused. HT PHOTOS
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