Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

TEACHER WHO TOOK TO TERROR

Security officials say tech-aided surveillan­ce helping intercepti­on of infiltrato­rs; 33 militants killed since March 21

- Mir Ehsan and Ravi Krishnan Khajuria letters@hindustant­imes.com

Riyaz Naikoo, the wanted terrorist who dodged the forces for eight years, rose to prominence in Hizbul ranks after the encounter killing of militant leader Burhan Wani in 2016. He was a teacher at a private school in Pulwama but became actively involved in militancy after Wani’s death, the police said.

SRINAGAR/JAMMU: Increased surveillan­ce by security forces and fresh infiltrati­on attempts — some of them successful — by militants are behind the frequent encounters in Jammu and Kashmir over the past one and a half months, according to officials.

Since March 21, at least 33 militants and two of their associates have been killed in 15 gunfights across the Valley.

Most of these encounters took place in four districts of south Kashmir — Pulwama, Shopian, Kulgam and Anantnag, which are considered the hotbed of militancy. Twenty security personnel lost their lives in this period. Eighteen were killed in gunfights and in attacks by militants, and two army men died on the Line of Control (LoC) in ceasefire violations by Pakistan.

A senior police officer who did not want to be named said the security grid has increased surveillan­ce in the four districts of south Kashmir, while also keeping a close watch on the LoC.

“There is a pattern of encounters going up in the months of April and May. Last year too, several operations were seen in Kashmir during these months,” the officer said. “March, April and May are the months when the snow starts melting in the upper reaches (of the Himalayas), and militants start infiltrati­ng from PoK (Pakistan-occupied Kashmir) into Kashmir — which results in several encounters,” the officer added. He said with modern surveillan­ce gadgets, security forces are registerin­g big successes in tracking and zeroing in on militants.

Another officer, who too did not want to be named, put emphasis on the need for technology­based surveillan­ce in anti-militancy operations, while underscori­ng the importance of tip-offs by sources in such campaigns.

“Once a militant comes in our radar, he is tracked through electronic surveillan­ce, and the success is remarkable. Also, human intelligen­ce inputs help the forces to coordinate operations in the better way,” the second officer said.

Earlier, Dilbag Singh, Jammu and Kashmir director general of police, too, cited fresh infiltrati­on attempts reported from north Kashmir’s Uri and Kupwara sectors as reasons behind frequent encounters.

“We get to know about militants and chase them. Sometimes, we also suffer casualties during operations,” Singh said on Tuesday in an event paying tributes to three CRPF personnel.

The three troopers, deployed at a check post, were killed in an attack in north Kashmir’s Handwara town. A section of security officials and experts believes ceasefire violations by Pakistan are a desperate attempt to foment unrest in India.

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