Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Three days on, police say no clue of attackers yet

- Vishal Joshi vishal.joshi@htlive.com :

BATHINDA Three days after four soldiers were killed at the high-security Bathinda Military Station, the authoritie­s are yet to nab the attackers.

Two unidentifi­ed people were booked for murder on Wednesday. According to the FIR, an INSAS (Indian Small Arms System) rifle and a magazine with 28 cartridges that went missing from an army unit were used by the suspects in the attack. The rifle was found later in the day. However, the authoritie­s are yet to find an axe which one of the attackers was carrying.

Questions are being raised on why the strategica­lly crucial establishm­ent was being manned by unarmed guards. Officials keeping a close watch on the probe said it was also important to investigat­e why there was no armed security personnel even as a Lance Naik lost his INSAS rifle and a magazine.

They said the attack could have been avoided or the armed guards would have reacted to a violent act that caused the deaths of four soldiers.

In the FIR, Major Ashutosh Shukla of the 80 Middle Regiment had stated that security personnel around the crime spot were ordered to remain unarmed. This is why no army personnel fired in retaliatio­n even after hearing gunshots and spotting two unidentifi­ed assailants in kurta-pyjama with their faces covered coming out of the barracks after the firing.

“It is for the army authoritie­s to clarify under which circumstan­ces the weapon and magazine went missing and why guards remained unarmed thereafter. The strategica­lly important compound was not put on extra alert. It is evident from the police statement given by the army official that unarmed guards were stationed around the crime spot,” said an official. There has been no official communicat­ion from the army authoritie­s on the killings since Wednesday evening. Investigat­ors are baffled by no recovery of an axe that was allegedly spotted near the crime scene. Police officials said it is important to recover the axe to connect the dots as the army authoritie­s in their complaint have stated that one of the unidentifi­ed assailants was carrying it.

Police and army authoritie­s have confirmed the recovery of an INSAS rifle and a magazine with 28 cartridges hours from the military station after the jawans were shot dead in their sleep at the barracks near an officers’ mess on Wednesday morning.

Bathinda superinten­dent of police (investigat­ion) Ajay Gandhi, who is heading the probe, said on Friday that the axe allegedly involved in the crime has still not been found yet.

“There is no trace of the said weapon seen by the eyewitness. To date, no person has been detained or arrested as a joint probe by district police and army authoritie­s is underway,” said Gandhi. HT first reported that the autopsy of the four soldiers at Shaheed Bhai Mani Singh Civil Hospital in Bathinda did not indicate the use of any injury caused by a sharp-edged weapon.

Schools remain shut

Eleven schools are shut indefinite­ly since the killings took place at the Bathinda Military Station on Wednesday morning.

There are three Kendriya Vidyalayas having about 1,000 students each while an Army Public School has an enrolment of nearly 3,000 students. The Military Station has seven playway schools.

The evaluation work of CBSE Class 10 and 12 going on at these schools has also been suspended indefinite­ly.

 ?? ?? Soldiers checking vehicles near the Bathinda Military Station after the firing incident on Wednesday.
HT FILE PHOTO
Soldiers checking vehicles near the Bathinda Military Station after the firing incident on Wednesday. HT FILE PHOTO

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