It was on July 29 that a Lashkar-e-Taiba operative,
Qasim, issued orders to
Mohammad Naved, a 20-year-old
Pakistani terrorist captured in
Udhampur after an attack on a
Border Security Force convoy on Wednesday, and his partner, Noman, to be ready for a
Fidayeen attack. A truck was arranged for them and they left for
Jammu from
Pulwama in south
Kashmir.
“Had it not been for
Constable Rocky, there could have been a bigger mayhem. Only Rocky had a weapon,”
D.K. Pathak, Director-General,
BSF, said. Rocky fell to the bullets of Noman, who flagged down a BSF bus and started firing. Constable Suvendu Roy was also killed in the firing.
The bus had 44 personnel on board. D.K. Pathak, Director-General, BSF, said had it not been for the courage and valour shown by Constable Rocky, more personnel would have fallen dead.
A senior government official said: “
What is revealing is that he [Naved] received constant help from
Abu Dujana, the number-two LeT man in the
Valley. Five more LeT cadres,
Usman,
Shahin,
Gulzar, Shokat
Lone and Abu Ukasha, who have been identified in police records, were with Naved and his group. It points to a clear involvement of LeT in this entire attack.”
On June 9, the four terrorists and two local guides hired a small truck from
Baba Rishi at
Tangmarg, where they reached after infiltrating through the LoC at
Kupwara on May 27, and reached
Awantipora. Here they were received by two local people and stayed in their house for four days. The group then reached a hideout in
Khrew. Here they were joined by three militants who recently infiltrated.
On August 4, Naved and Noman crossed the toll plaza at
Jawahar tunnel at 2.15 p.m. and took a receipt for travelling to
Punjab. In the evening, they crossed
Ramban and reached
Patnitop, where they stayed for the night and cooked their own food. The next day, the truck dropped them at a tea stall near Samroli in Udhampur, where the attack took place. The two had tea and around 8 a.m., they opened fire at the BSF bus.
The
Jammu and Kashmir government on Thursday sanctioned the prosecution of captured Pakistani militant
Mohammed Naved for waging war against the country.
District Magistrate of Udhampur,
Shahid Iqbal Choudhary, said the Pakistani national has been booked under
Section 121 of
RPC (waging war against the country) among other sections. "It has been established beyond reasonable doubt that an offence of criminal conspiracy has been committed by the terrorist which attracts the provisions of sections 121 and 121-A RPC. Sanction is hereby accorded as per the provisions of section 196 CrPC for prosecution in the court of law following due procedure established under law," the DM said in a prosecution order on Thursday.
- published: 07 Aug 2015
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