Like the word "detailed questioning"Malla and Ahmed were picked up and subjected to detailed questioning, after which they told the police how they had procured the SIM cards and when the cards were handed over to the Lashker militants.

Like the word "detailed questioning"Malla and Ahmed were picked up and subjected to detailed questioning, after which they told the police how they had procured the SIM cards and when the cards were handed over to the Lashker militants.
Then what happened here?jamwal wrote:AFAIK, pre-paid sims can't be used for calling Pakistani numbers.
Paki SIMs can't be used anywhere except a small area around LoC where Paki cellphone towers have enough coverage. Certainly not in Srinagar.amdavadi wrote:It could be paki sim card being used for the call? Since they know Indian sim cards might be track.
But a paki can call a pre-paid sim number. I think this is what would have happenedjamwal wrote:AFAIK, pre-paid sims can't be used for calling Pakistani numbers.
Srinagar, Jan 15 (IANS) A gunfight was under way between separatist guerrillas and security personnel in north Kashmir’s Sopore town Friday after militants lobbed a grenade at a police station, injuring one person, officials said.
Separatist guerrillas first lobbed a grenade at the heavily guarded police station in the heart of Sopore, injuring a local Congress party worker.
A senior police officer said the grenade hit the roof of the police station building, rolled down and exploded near the main entrance.
“A local Congress party worker was wounded in the explosion. He was taken to hospital and has been referred by the doctors to Srinagar,” the officer said.
Once senior police officers reached the explosion site, guerrillas who were hiding in the vicinity opened fire, triggering a gun battle.
Are the terrorists neutralized?killed, 6 injured in militant attack PTI | Srinagar
A policeman was among two persons killed and six others were injured when militants attacked Sopore police station in Baramulla district with grenades and gunfire twice within an hour on Friday. The constable and a civilian, injured in the indiscriminate firing by militants on the police station in the North Kashmir town, succumbed to injuries on way to SMHS hospital here, official sources said. They said both the persons were declared brought dead by doctors on arrival at the hospital. The deceased civilian who was hit by a bullet in the abdomen was identified as Pervaiz Ahmad, a resident of Hajam Mohalla locality of Sopore, 55 kms from Srinagar. Additional Superintendent of Police Abdul Waheed told PTI over phone that the militants attacked the police station around 11.25 AM and the policemen guarding the complex retaliated. The exchange of fire continued for nearly 30 minutes.
Earlier, militants hurled a grenade towards the police station around 10.25 AM. The grenade exploded outside the main gate, injuring Mohammad Latief Mirchal who had unsuccessfully contested the last assembly elections as an independent from Sopore constituency"
JAVID AHMED
Inspector
The information was soild, “Ek dum pukhta,” as the informer told Inspector Javid Ahmed. A militant had been spotted inside a college in Shopian in south Kashmir. There was no time to lose. Javid and his three men rushed immediately—as the inspector recounts.
At the college ground, Javid saw a young man near a motorcycle. As Javid approached, the young man pulled out a grenade. Unfazed, Javid jumped at him, even as two of his own men ran away. “I held his hands tightly in mine while he tried hard to pull the pin,” says Javid. The third policeman, who hadn’t fled, stood paralysed with fear while Javid’s fight went on. It lasted for almost five long minutes before Javid finally managed to loosen the militant’s hands. The grenade landed on a road nearby, beyond the college wall, but luckily did not explode.
ramana,ramana wrote:Its repugnant to call uniformed Indian police officers fidayeen. I think the writer is doing psy-ops on them. What he is sub-concisously doing is an = = between J&K police and terrorists even if he is trying to praise the former. Either he is too naive or too enlightened.
Hussain belongs to the 1999 batch of the J&K Police. “It is called the fidayeen batch,” he quips
Thanks a ton for the link.pgbhat wrote:Mandeep ji had posted this in FB.
The Khaki FidayeenJAVID AHMED
Inspector
The information was soild, “Ek dum pukhta,” as the informer told Inspector Javid Ahmed. A militant had been spotted inside a college in Shopian in south Kashmir. There was no time to lose. Javid and his three men rushed immediately—as the inspector recounts.
At the college ground, Javid saw a young man near a motorcycle. As Javid approached, the young man pulled out a grenade. Unfazed, Javid jumped at him, even as two of his own men ran away. “I held his hands tightly in mine while he tried hard to pull the pin,” says Javid. The third policeman, who hadn’t fled, stood paralysed with fear while Javid’s fight went on. It lasted for almost five long minutes before Javid finally managed to loosen the militant’s hands. The grenade landed on a road nearby, beyond the college wall, but luckily did not explode.
Click on the link to read all.
I do recall a colonel being killed in a encounter ( first such ranking officer in J&K in a long time) few years back. I guess this is the encounter in question.Two Army soldiers were killed, and Hafiz Nasir took refuge in another house. Hussain was called right back. He was in favour of blasting the house, but the colonel wanted to be sure—and took a peep inside. Nasir shot him. “He died on the spot,” says Hussain. It was only afterwards that he and his police team managed to kill Nasir.
“Many Pakistani boys work for us,” he discloses, “providing us vital information about militant activities in Kashmir.”
SDRE soosai bomber?Nayak wrote:
BSF officials reiterate he is a fidayeen and expressed surprise that severe charges have not been imposed on him
Border Security Force (BSF) troopers on Sunday killed an infiltrator who was trying to sneak into the Indian Territory in Ranbirsinghpora sector from the Line of Control (LoC) that divides Jammu and Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
SDRE soosai bomber?[/quote]sum wrote: BSF officials reiterate he is a fidayeen and expressed surprise that severe charges have not been imposed on him
After throwing a grenade at the Sopore police station on Friday morning, the four militants armed with AK rifles didn’t flee. Instead, they waited a dozen yards away in the neighbourhood across the street.
An hour later, when a police party tried to cordon off the neighbourhood, they returned to the gate of the police station, throwing grenades and opening fire at the personal guards of the Superintendent of Police who was inside.
The encounter, which killed one policeman and a civilian and injured four policemen on Friday, is the seventh such attack this year. But the manner in which the militants attacked a police station in broad daylight in the middle of Sopore town has shocked the security establishment.
In fact, there are ample signs that after a hiatus of three years, militancy has returned with vigour. And Sopore town —a one-time hub of the Valley’s pro-Pakistan militant groups—is back as the centre of this renewed militant movement.
The J&K Police has confirmed the presence of 25 top militants active in Sopore alone while putting the adjoining 14 villages of Zaingeer belt that connects Sopore town to Bandipore as the new militant hub in north Kashmir.
Police sources suggest that the three top commanders of Lashkar, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and Hizbul are hiding in this area. Identified as Abdullah Unny of Lashkar, Nouman of Harkat and Hizbul Mujahideen’s old hand Dawood, the police say the militants have revived their networks and established links between their new hideouts in Kupwara, Sopore and Bandipore.
Inspector General of J&K Police, Kashmir range, Farooq Ahmad said that there is presence and movement of militants especially Lashkar in Sopore town and the adjoining villages of Zainageer. “This is a problem and we are making serious effort to address it,” he said. The presence of militants in Sopore town is no longer underground. Police sources reveal that Lashkar’s top commander Abdullah Unny had been moving around freely till the local police released his pictures recently.
Then the recent fidayeen attack in Lalchowk where two militants engaged the police and the security forces in a stand-off for more than 22 hours too had originated in Sopore. The local militant Manzoor Ahmad alias Usman who was part of the fidayeen squad and was killed in the Lalchowk stand-off was from a village in the outskirts of Sopore town. Then the police traced the location of Harkat commander Nouman—who was directing the two militants during the Lalchowk encounter—to Sopore town.
Senior police officers told The Indian Express that the reason as to why the militants have been able to establish their network effectively in Sopore town and the adjoining Zainageer belt is the ideological background of the majority of the people in this area. “It has been very difficult to generate information about the militant movement or their hideouts. The militants have support here,” a senior officer said. “Sopore-Zainageer is a traditional support base of separatists, especially pro-Pakistan groups.”
The militant presence is, however, not limited to Sopore and Zainageer alone. The J&K Police’s internal assessment suggests that there are more than 50 militants active in Lolab which is connected to both Zainageer and Bandipore through mountain passes. Police also reveal that there is a new militant module consisting of 25 militants in Rajwar belt.
South Kashmir is also not calm. Sources in the J&K police reveal that there is new militant infiltration in Anantnag and Kulgam areas. “We have no idea about the number of the militants,” a top police officer said. The police have identified Tral, Kellar and Damhal Hanjipora as the new militant hubs across South Kashmir. “Our inputs suggest that there are 15 militants active in Tral while five top militants are roaming around Kellar,” the officer said.
The militants have also attacked the source base of the security agencies in south Kashmir. In fact, the killing of Gulzar Ahmad Dar alias Khalil — a former militant-turned-source was a major blow to the police and security forces in Kulgam. Sources reveal that the militants have already killed “six to seven sources of police and other security agencies” — a move that has helped militants regroup.
While I cannot comment on the ability and resolve of our political leadrship, Indian Army for sure had planned the offensive into and capture of POK. It was called OP Trident and as per Ravi Rikhye (of Orbat.Com), the Brasstacks in 1987 was an elaborate ruse for the hammer that was to fall on POK. 6th Mountain Division was airlifted/shifted to Leh from peace time locations in western UP to carry out the operations. Our amreeki freinds tipped off the PA and PA reinforced the sector in double time. And ofcourse, the political leadership chickened out and lost heart.negi wrote:We never ever went to war what we did was merely fend off the attacks . As for J&K I am still struggling to figure out as to what the hell did GOI in past 60 years for its just another piece of bone which it can neither swallow nor throw up .
Avoid such statements for your rest of the post will be ignored and you will be flogged around by latching up to the above statement. Hell these days someone might carry out a majorEither our govt is full of traitors or is incredibly foolish and inept.
DDM. Ranbirsinghpura (RS Pura) is south of Jammu along the International Border.pgbhat wrote:Paki InsasedBorder Security Force (BSF) troopers on Sunday killed an infiltrator who was trying to sneak into the Indian Territory in Ranbirsinghpora sector from the Line of Control (LoC) that divides Jammu and Kashmir between India and Pakistan.
JAMMU: Pakistani troops fired at an Indian border post in the Krishna Ghati sector of Poonch district for over an hour Monday night, an army officer said here. There were no casualties.
The Pakistani troops from Kaddu post fired at Kranti post on the Indian side, the officer said, adding that the firing was unprovoked. "They fired with machine guns and rockets for over an hour on our position," a brigadier general of the Indian Army's 16 Corps said Tuesday.
Pointing out that this was yet another violation of the November 2003 ceasefire agreement between the two countries, the officer said the Indian side retaliated to the firing.
He added that the Indian side was yet to ascertain the reason for the firing which could be "cover fire to infiltrators or some other reason. But the matter shall be taken up with Pakistan in a serious way".
Infiltration attempts from Pakistan and firing across the border have been on the rise in recent months. The Border Security Force (BSF) has foiled about a dozen infiltration attempts this year near Jammu.
Deputy Inspector General (DIG) of BSF J.B. Sangwan said that the infiltration focus from the border near Jammu "signifies that militants were planning strikes in and around Jammu. We are on alert to foil such attempts."
Security forces are anyway on high alert in the run-up to Republic Day, with additional deployment at vulnerable places.
We are seeing a very rapid escalation in violence levels and tactics in J&K. The Pakis are really upping the ante. Wonder how we will respond?A stunning recovery of arms made in Kishtwar in Jammu has set the alarm bells ringing in security circles - in fact, for the first time ever during last the two decades of terrorism in the valley.
Weaponry of heavy caliber like - anti-tank rifle grenades, 6 of them - were recovered from a terrorist hideout.
It maybe worth noting that artillery used in Kargil was way greater in numbers than the normal complement of a Division. The ammunition requirement too was therefore greater than what a Division is stocked with.negi wrote:
For instance Kargil conflict was not only another shining example of intelligence failure but overall exhibition of chicanery from all quarters when military could have crossed the LOC and captured key heights to deny the view of NH-1 and other key posts, but TSP was not made to pay and we had pompous people mobilising for parakaram for nothing ; to add to the chutzpah we heard empty shrill rhetoric about severe consequences if TSP indulges in any such misadventure again and to latter's credit they did their part in 26/11 and rest as they is history.
I, for one, would like to believe that the powers that be, weighed up the pros and cons and took a very deliberate decision.This military-bureaucrat nexus nearly pushed through the lease of 40 towed Denel T-6 howitzers - currently undergoing trials - during panic buying by the Army during the Kargil conflict.
Military sources said that Lt.Gen. Shamsher S. Mehta, then Deputy Chief of Army Staff (Planning and Systems) in charge of procurements and now the Western Army Commander, had proposed leasing the T-6 howitzers in June 1999 with the eventual aim of acquiring them in large numbers once the border war ended. The proposal, which moved rapidly upwards in the MoD for approval in a system known for its unhurried approach to even crisis situations, stressed the "commonality" factor between the towed howitzer and Bhim.
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