Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Anantnag man’s car used in Pulwama strike

- Rajesh Ahuja

NEW DELHI: The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) on Monday said it has managed to identify the Maruti Eeco vehicle used in the terror attack of February 14 in which 40 CRPF personnel were killed in Pulwama and said the vehicle’s owner, Sajjad Bhat of Bijbehara in district Anantnag of Jammu and Kashmir, was directly involved in the attack.

The investigat­ors said Bhat was missing for the last few days but stressed the vehicle, of which he was the eighth in the long line of owners, gave them key clues into the worst terror strike in the Valley in three decades of insurgency.

“He [Bhat] has reportedly joined [Pakistan-based terrorist outfit] JEM [Jaish-e-mohammed, led by Masood Azhar],” NIA spokesman Alok Mittal said.

“He was a student of Siraj-ululoom [a madarsa], Shopian. A raid was conducted by an NIA team at his house with the help of J&K Police on February 23. However, Bhat was found not present in his house and thereafter has been evading arrest . He has reportedly now joined JEM. A photograph to this effect has also appeared in social media where he is seen holding weapons,” Mittal added.

HT reported in Monday’s edition that investigat­ors had identified the vehicle, that the explosives (25kg of RDX) were carried in a container, and that investigat­ors believed the operation was carried out by a JEM unit in which the explosives knowhow came from across the border but which included some locals -- the bomber, his handler, and possibly, the owner of the vehicle.

Mittal said on Tuesday that investigat­ors pieced together remnants of the car used by the suicide bomber, JEM operative Aadil Ahmad Dar of Kakapora in south Kashmir, from the scene of crime in the Lethpora area. Dar is believed to have been driving the vehicle alone, he added.

“A Maruti Eeco vehicle having chassis number MA3ERLF1SO­O183735 [and] engine G12BN16414­0 was sold to Md Jaleel Ahmed Haqani, a resident of Heaven colony, Anantnag in the year 2011. It subsequent­ly changed hands seven times and finally reached Sajjad Bhat,” said Mittal.

Investigat­ors said pieces of vehicle were spread over a radius of around 150 metres and painstakin­gly collected by the forensic experts working with a team from vehicle manufactur­er Maruti Suzuki.

“Most of the vehicle parts are generally not numbered, but they can be identified by number of lots in which they were manufactur­ed. Once the lots were identified, the manufactur­er checked its computeris­ed data to find out about the lots of vehicles and where they went for sale,” said an investigat­or who asked not to be named

After identifyin­g the lots of vehicles, the agency zeroed in on a couple of vehicles that were sent to dealers in Jammu and Kashmir.

2019 FEBRUARY 25,

 ??  ?? Sajjad Bhat, who has joined JEM ranks, bought the Maruti Eeco 10 days before the deadly February 14 attack.
Sajjad Bhat, who has joined JEM ranks, bought the Maruti Eeco 10 days before the deadly February 14 attack.
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