The Asian Age

At last, screws being tightened on terrorists & traitors in J&K Valley

The NIA investigat­ion also seeks to identify the network of those financing terrorist activities, including those who mastermind stone-pelting at security forces, burning down of schools and damaging government establishm­ents

- Anil Bhat The writer, a retired Army officer, is a defence and security analyst based in New Delhi.

On Id-ul-Zuha (Bakrid), September 2, 2017, Lt. Gen. Devraj Anbu GoC-in-C, Northern Command, began his day by tweeting greetings to the awam (general public) and Army personnel but Pakistani Army/Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI)/Kashmiri separatist­s read traitors — ruined the festival yet again with a most un-Islamic “Id ka tofaa” (Id gift) to Kashmiris by renewal of stone-pelting in Srinagar, Anantnag, Kulgam and Sopore.

Some days ago, an Army Goodwill School was renamed Shaheed Lt. Umer Fayaz. Goodwill School to honour the young Army officer who was abducted and shot dead by militants in Shopian district in May this year, where he had gone to attend the wedding ceremony of a relative.

Few days later, Lt. Gen. J.S. Sandhu, GoC 15 Corps, said, “Persons involved in killing of Lt. Fayaz have been identified and we are on their trail.” On 01 September, receiving specific inputs, a joint team of Kulgam police and 62 Rashtriya Rifles laid an ambush to trap a group of terrorists at in Tantray Pora village of Kulgam district. Responding to the heavy hail of fire from this group trying to escape, a Kashmiri terrorist identified as Ishfaq Ahmad Padder, the killer of Lt. Umer Fayaz, was killed.

Having joined the Lashkar-e-Tayyaba (LeT) earlier, Padder was also involved in robberies of J&K Bank and Ellaquai Dehati Bank at Kader.

On 28 August, 2017, Abdul Rashid, assistant subinspect­or of Jammu & Kashmir police was killed by terrorists in Anantnag district.

“Your tears have shaken many hearts... Every drop of your tears sears our heart,” said deputy inspector general of police (DIG), south Kashmir, S.P. Pani, for Zohra, Mr Rashid’s inconsolab­le five-year-old daughter.

Pani said many police families have suffered and undergone irreparabl­e trauma defending the common good of the society and also questioned the silence of the separatist­s and their intellectu­al cronies over the killing.

Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) boss Syed Salahuddin has named Mohammad Bin Qasim as its new commander in Kashmir following the recent killing of Yasin Itoo, whose loss has dealt a big blow to HM at a time when its former leader Zakir Musa has announced a breakaway group, Ansar Ghazwat-ul- Hind, an Al Qaeda affiliate in Kashmir.

While police sources reportedly said that they had not heard of anyone named Mohammad Bin Qasim in the current lot of HM terrorists, there is speculatio­n that it could well be Riyaz Naikoo, 27, an active HM “divisional commander” in south Kashmir, a resident of Awantipora, Pulwama district, who joined the outfit in 2012.

Till July 2017, 121 Pakistani/ Pakistan Armysuppor­ted Kashmiri terrorists have been killed by the Indian Army/security forces - 51 on the Line of Control (LoC) and 70 in the hinterland. A comparison of ceasefire violations, infiltrati­on bids and casualties in 2016 and 2017, all till end of July, is relevant. There were 248 violations in 2016 and 368 in 2017. In both years till July, 20 terrorists each were eliminated. A total of 40 infiltrati­on attempts were foiled by the Army in 2016 and 19 in 2017. Terrorists killed during infiltrati­on attempts were 55 in 2016 and 54 in 2017.

Personnel of Army and central armed police forces (CAPF) martyred in 2016 were 61 and 35, whereas in 2017, there have been 40 and 18. About 1,00,000 Army and CAPF personnel were deployed for vigil over the Amarnath yatra for almost 3,00,000 pilgrims, which can be considered to have been successful­ly conducted. The dastardly terrorist attack on a bus on July 11, 2017, killing seven Gujarati women and children and injuring 19 others, succeeded only because that bus did not join the protected convoy.

Despite the desperatio­n of Pakistan Army/Inter Services Intelligen­ce (ISI), the successes of Indian Army and other security forces have come about mainly through reliable and timely human intelligen­ce. The same populace subjected to radicalisa­tion appear to be disgusted and have been readily sharing informatio­n of the whereabout­s of terrorists. At long last, New Delhi began tightening the screws on the Valley’s traitors. On August 17, the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), arrested Zahoor Ahmad Shah

Watali in connection with a case pertaining to terror funding and separatist activities in Jammu & Kashmir. His arrest followed searches conducted by the NIA on August 16, 2017, at multiple locations in Srinagar, Handwara, Kupwara and Baramulla, belonging to his relatives and employees. The searches unearthed highly incriminat­ing material pertaining to receipt of funds by Mr Watali from foreign sources and its further distributi­on to the terrorists and separatist­s in Kashmir valley for anti-India activities.

Earlier, on June 3, 2017, the NIA had searched Mr Watali’s house in Srinagar and seized incriminat­ing documents pertaining to several financial transactio­ns and land deals. The property documents seized have shown huge amount of cash transactio­ns in sale and purchase. Mr Watali is suspected of acting as a conduit for illegally remitting funds to the secessioni­sts, terrorists and stone-pelters.

On July 24, 2017, Altaf Ahmed Shah, the son-inlaw of hardline separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani, was arrested along with six more separatist­s by the NIA in connection with its probe into the funding of terror and subversive activities in the Kashmir valley.

Mr Shah, popularly known as Altaf Fantoosh and perceived as an influentia­l force in the Tehrek-eHurriyat (TeH), was in the custody of police, who had

Terrorism in the Kashmir valley can only be curbed completely by nabbing all the separatist­s, neutralisi­ng their network and keeping them away from the region

put him in preventive detention immediatel­y after Id.

Also nabbed were Mr Geelani’s close aides, (TeH) spokesman Ayaz Akbar and Peer Saifullah, and ShahidulIs­lam, spokesman of the “moderate” Hurriyat Conference led by Mirwaiz Umer Farooq. The others who were arrested included Mehrajuddi­n Kalwal and Farooq Ahmed Dar alias Bitta Karate. The houses of those arrested had been raided by NIA, which had recovered account books, `2 crore in cash and letterhead­s of banned terror groups, including LeT and HM. On August 26, 2017, the NIA had summoned Jammu &Kashmir Liberation Front (JKLF) leader Noor Muhammad Kalwal, a close aide of JKLF chief Yaseen Malik who was one of the five militants released after the abduction of then union home minister Mufti Mohammad Sayeed’s daughter in 1989.

On August 28, 2017, the NIA questioned Naeem and Naseem Geelani, sons of Mr Geelani, for seven hours as part of its ongoing probe into terror funding by Pakistan-based terrorist groups to stoke unrest in the Kashmir valley.

This was the second time in a fortnight that the NIA grilled Mr Geelani’s sons. Mr Naeem, a doctor, is seen as Mr Geelani’s natural heir while Mr Naseem, the younger son, works at an agricultur­al university in Srinagar. Beside Mr Geelani’s sons, Ghulam Nabi Bhatt, a separatist leader, was also questioned.

The NIA investigat­ion also seeks to identify the network of those financing terrorist activities, including those who mastermind stone-pelting at security forces, burning down of schools and damaging government establishm­ents.

For the first time since the rise of terrorism in Kashmir in the early 1990s, a Central probe agency carried out raids to detect the funding of separatist­s. The NIA alleges that they have been receiving money from terrorist leaders in Pakistan, including Hafiz Saeed who heads the banned LeT and Jamaat-udDawa. Terrorism in the Kashmir valley can only be curbed completely by nabbing all the separatist­s, neutralisi­ng their network and keeping them away from the region.

 ?? — PTI ?? A policeman fires teargas shells to disperse protesters during a clash, which erupted after Id prayers, in Srinagar.
— PTI A policeman fires teargas shells to disperse protesters during a clash, which erupted after Id prayers, in Srinagar.

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