Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Arms seized from GNLA in Meghalaya

- Utpal Parashar utpal.parashar@htlive.com

Nearly one-and-a-half months after the self-styled chief of proscribed Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA), Sohan D Shira, was killed in an encounter, the police in Meghalaya’s Garo Hills region on Sunday seized a huge cache of weapons belonging to the outfit.

A bulk of the arms were recovered from Chachatgre village near Williamnag­ar, headquarte­rs of East Garo Hills district.

Other recoveries were made from different places from a jungle near Donrengkig­re village.

The military hardware included two AK-56 rifles, a light machine gun and an INSAS rifle, 30 pistols, live ammunition, and magazines. Police also found walkie-talkie sets, batteries, wires and circuits along with the weapons and ammunition.

Police zeroed in on the weapons following interrogat­ion of five people with links to the GNLA. Most of the weapons are believed to have belonged to Shira, who hid them at different locations for use at later stages.

“Most of the weapons were hidden by Shira himself and only a handful of people knew about their whereabout­s. Our investigat­ions and inputs from some GNLA cadres helped in their recovery,” said a senior police officer.

Meghalaya’s most wanted man Shira was killed on February 24 in East Garo Hills in an encounter with the police.

The GNLA was suspected to have carried out a bomb attack on February 18, which killed Jonathone N Sangma, the Nationalis­t Congress Party candidate from the Williamnag­ar assembly seat.

Election to the assembly seat was counterman­ded following Sangma’s death and a manhunt launched to nab Shira.

Polling in rest of the state took place on February 27. Election to the Williamnag­ar seat will be held on April 27.

Apart from the weapons recovered on Sunday, police have dug out many others belonging to the GNLA from different parts of the region. Efforts are still underway to locate all the contraband.

Following Shira’s death, eight GNLA cadres, who belonged to the last batch of the outfit, surrendere­d in March, virtually ending the rebel outfit’s manpower.

Formed in 2009 with the aim of creating a separate ‘Garoland’ in the western parts of Meghalaya, the GNLA was once estimated to have round 200-250 foot soldiers.

GUWAHATI:

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