The National - News

Pakistani militants accused of attack

India says incident caused discord with Islamabad

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NEW DELHI // India yesterday accused Pakistani militant leader Maulana Masood Azhar of mastermind­ing an audacious attack on an airforce base in January that led to a breakdown in relations between the two nuclear-armed nations.

Seven soldiers were killed in the attack on the Indian air force base in Pathankot, which New Delhi has said could not have been carried out without the help of the Islamabad government.

It blames the Pakistan-based group Jaish- e- Mohammed (Jem), founded by Azhar, who was released from an Indian prison in exchange for passengers of a hijacked Indian Airlines plane in 1999.

India’s National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) filed formal charges yesterday naming Azhar, his brother Rauf Asghar and two other members of the banned group after concluding an investigat­ion into the January attack.

“We have filed the charge sheet and further investigat­ions will continue,” an NIA official said.

“We have material evidence against the accused.” No arrests have yet been made over the Pathankot attack, a rare instance of militants targeting an Indian military installati­on outside the disputed region of Kashmir. All the accused are reportedly living in Pakistan. Pakistan banned Jem in 2002, a year after it was blamed for an attack on the Indian parliament that took the two neighbours to the brink of war.

It also arrested the group’s leader in the 2008 Mumbai attacks, but he was released.

NIA investigat­ors said Asghar had posted a video message claiming responsibi­lity for the Pathankot attack, which came days after Indian prime minister Narendra Modi made a surprise Christmas Day visit to Pakistan to meet his counterpar­t.

The NIA said the attackers stole a taxi after crossing into India, killing the driver, before hijacking a police officer’s car to reach the airbase.

It said four Pakistani militants had been killed in the January 2 attack. Initial reports had put the number of attackers at six.

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