JAI HIND

JAI HIND

Thursday, July 1, 2010

41 killed in explosions at shrine in Lahore, Pakistan 01/07/2010


Islamabad, Pakistan -- Three explosions erupted Thursday in Lahore in and around one of Pakistan's holiest shrines, killing 41 people and wounding 175, an official told CNN.
District Coordination Officer Sajjad Bhutta in Lahore described the casualty toll as he was touring hospitals where the wounded were being treated.
Lahore Commissioner Khusro Pervez said 25 of the wounded were in critical condition and that the remains of two suicide bombers -- a man in his 20s and another in his late teens -- were recovered after the blasts, which occurred at the Data Darbar shrine complex.
One of the bombers detonated in the shrine's courtyard; the other in the shrine's lower lever, he said. Two of the fatalities were women, he said.
The first explosion, which occurred at 10:48 p.m. (1:48 p.m. ET), was followed five minutes later by a second blast, Geo TV reported.
The CNN affiliate aired surveillance footage showing the first attacker entering through a gate holding a bag. As he passed through a metal detector, alarms went off and the man ran toward an area used for ablutions and blew himself up.
Geo TV showed a second attacker entering amid the confusion a few minutes later and running upstairs carrying a bag. Then the video showed the explosion.
The third blast occurred outside the shrine; the timing of the last blast was not clear.
Geo TV reported that the heads of two bombers were recovered and identified. The bombers had arrived at the shrine on foot wearing 10 kilogram (22 pound) jackets that had been packed with ball bearings, it said.
A witness told Geo TV that one of the bombers was wearing the traditional loose-fitting salwar kameez, a turban and slippers.
"This sickening poison of extremism will be driven out of our nation and we will not be cowed," said Farahnaz Ispahani, a spokeswoman for President Asif Ali Zardari, in a text message to CNN.
"Peaceful worshipers have once again been targeted by those who want to destroy the fabric of this great country. We will not forgive or forget and we will get justice for all Pakistanis murdered in cold blood -- be they Muslim, Christian, Ahmedi or of any other faith."

Source BY GEO/CNN TV NEWS
Jai Hind
Rahul Vallamber

Recent Naxal Attacks In The Country

Following is the chronology of major recent Naxal attacks in the country.

June 29,2010: 27 CRPF jawans were killed by Naxalites in Chhattisgarh, comes as the CPI-Maoist vowed to continue attacking security forces.

May 16, 2010: Six villagers were killed by Naxalites in Rajnandgaon district of Chhattisgarh. Among those killed was the sarpanch of the village.

April 6, 2010: In the country's worst Maoist attack ever, at least 75 Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and a state police personnel were killed in an ambush, in the thick Mukrana forests of Chhattisgarh's Dantewada district.

April 4, 2010: Maoists triggered a landmine blast killing 11 security personnel of the elite anti-Naxal force Special Operations Group (SOG) in Koraput district of Orissa.

February 15, 2010: 24 personnel of the Eastern Frontier Rifles (EFR) killed as Maoists attack their camp in Silda in West Midnapore district of West Bengal.

October 8, 2009: 17 policemen killed when Maoists ambushed them at Laheri police station in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra.

September 30, 2009: Naxalites set ablaze Gram Panchayat offices at Korchi and Belgaon in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra.

September 26, 2009: Naxals kill BJP MP from Balaghat Baliram Kashyap's sons at Pairaguda village in Jagdalpur (Chhattisgarh).

September 4, 2009: Naxals kill four villagers in a forest in Aaded village in Chhattisgarh's Bijapur district.

July 31, 2009: A special police officer and another person killed by Naxals in Bijapur district.

July 27, 2009: Six persons killed when Naxals trigger a landmine blast at Dantewada district in Chhattisgarh.

July 23, 2009: A 40-year-old tribal killed by Naxalites at Ettapalli taluka in Gadchiroli district.

Jai Hind
Rahul Vallamber

27 CRPF JAWANS killed By Naxilites, 29/06/10



In the wake of repeated attacks by Maoists on CRPF, the government is working out a plan for the redeployment of paramilitary forces engaged in anti-Naxal operations in states.

The development, two days after Naxals ambushed and killed 27 CRPF jawans in Chhattisgarh, comes as the CPI-Maoist vowed to continue attacking security forces.
"We will continue to hit hard security personnel because their atrocities against local innocent people are continuing," Gudsa Usendi, spokesperson of CPI-Maoist's frontal unit, DK Special Zonal Committee, told a news channel in Chhattisgarh from an undisclosed location.

The spokesperson refused to give details about the June 29 attack that left 27 security personnel dead in Narayanpur district, a part of 40,000 sq km restive Bastar region.

The guerrilla evaded questions such as how many Maoists were killed, how many rebels took part in the ambush, who led the attack, and how many and what kind of weapons the Maoists had looted from the slain men.


"The June 29 attack was part of Maoists' continuous retaliation against police atrocities on locals," he said.

A plan is now being worked out for reconfiguration, redeployment and strengthening of the paramilitary forces in Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Orissa and West Bengal phasewise in consultation with the state governments.

"It has become necessary to review the deployment of forces and a suitable decision will be taken according to the operational requirement and developmental reasons," a Home Ministry official said.

However, no central forces deployed in a particular state will be moved out from that state.

According to the plan, which will be implemented first in Chhattisgarh where CRPF has faced maximum casualties in the recent past, the distances of troop posts will be reduced and in some cases the number of personnel will be increased while in other cases the posts will be relocated.

After Chhattisgarh, the plan will be implemented in Jharkhand, Orissa and West Bengal.

Home Minister P Chidambaram had yesterday said that "relocation and reconfiguration" of paramilitary forces in Chhattisgarh may be required as some of them were not operationally viable.

"These deployments have been made in 2007 and 2008. So, I have asked the Chhattisgarh government to examine the deployments in 2010," he had said.

Chhattisgarh police to adopt aggressive strategy' Chhattisgarh police will adopt an aggressive strategy while dealing with the Naxalites in the wake of increasing attacks by the outlaws, State Home Minister Nanki Ram Kanwar said today.

The police will adopt an aggressive stance against Naxals and will try to eliminate them rather than risking their lives, Kanwar told reporters here.

A change in strategy has been necessitated following three major strikes in the State in which the lives of many jawans were lost, he said.

Kanwar said Chief Minister Raman Singh held a high level meeting to discuss the issue but refused to divulge further details.

Jai hind
Rahul Vallamber

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Iraq bomb blast: 120 killed in series of explosions on 10th may 2010




BOMB EXPLOSIONS(10/05/2010) in the streets of Bagdad lost its news value, if the death toll is in tens. But when it touches hundred, the story is altogether different. Monday began with series of blast across Iraq killing at least 100 people and injuring hundreds. This is deadliest day of this year so far.
Three bombs hit the southern Shiite port city of Basra in the evening. One of them exploded in market place killing at least 15 people. The day began with the killing of 10 people in capital in an co-ordinate attack.

The most deadly incident took place in city of Hillah, 95 km south of Bagdad. A suicide bomber blew himself up among the crowd trying to help the victim of two car bombs that went off earlier outside a textile factory.


Official in hospital said that at least 120 people are dead and more than 170 are seriously injured.

The government blamed al-Qaida in Iraq for violence in Baghdad, saying the terror group is stepping up its attacks now to exploit political instability. More than two months after the March 7 elections, it is not clear who will control the next Iraqi government and the U.S. is planning to pull out half of its 92,000 troops over the next four months.


Tall claims by Iraqi and U.S forces about the security seem to be nothing but self-satisfactory lies. This scale of violence is clear reminder of the fact that the ultras are still very active and they can topple nay government in just few months time.

There is no immediate claim of responsibility; leaders are blaming al-Qaida for this kind of attacks, saying the group is attempting to exploit Iraq’s political instability. Compared to 2006-07 the violence has fallen dramatically in recent past, but political vacuum in the wake of inconclusive election has raised the risk of sectarian violence.

In another twin explosion in Suwayrah, 40 km south of Bagdad, 11 people died and dozens are seriously wounded.

Follwing the chain of blast, third blast occurred in Tarmiyah city, 50 km north of Bagdad. This blast injured the Mayor of the city, killed five, and injured seven. More than six people died in one such bomb explosion in city of Abu Gharib, west of Bagdad.

Whoever is the killer, whatever is the purpose, but this total tally of one less then 100 clearly shows that the Iraqi mission is total failure except Saddam.

Jai Hind

Rahul Vallamber

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

73 jawans killed in Chhattisgarh Naxal attack


At least 73 CRPF personnel were killed in an attack by Naxalites in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh early on Tuesday.
The attack took place when a CRPF patrol party was returning from a road opening duty in the Naxalite-infested Mukrana forest in the district between six to seven am.
"We have rushed helicopters to evacuate the casualties," Chhattisgarh Director General of Police Viswa Ranjan said.
The death toll in the attack may rise as many of the personnel have been seriously injured.
The CRPF patrol party was totally taken aback by the Maoists who surfaced at a hillock to carry out the attack.
During the attack, the Maoists opened indiscriminate fire and triggered an IED blast.
Dantewada Superintendent of Police Amresh Mishra told that the Naxals blew up a vehicle carrying the CRPF personnel.
The incident took place in the early hours near Chintalnar -Tarmetla village in the district when ultras attacked a joint team comprising personnel from CRPF, district forces and special police, he said.
The team had been camping in interiors of Tarmetla jungles for the last three days as part of a combing operation, Mishra said.
Four policemen have been injured in the blast. Additional police forces have been rushed to the spot, he said.
The attack came two days after Maoists triggered a landmine blast killing 11 security personnel and injuring several others in Orissa's Koraput district.
The landmine had exploded in Tanginiguda area when a van carrying jawans of the elite anti-Naxalite Special Operation Group (SOG) was returning from an operation in adjacent Malkangiri district.


Jai Hind

Rahul Vallamber

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Pune blast part of Lashkar's 'Karachi Project'?

PUNE/NEW DELHI: Investigators suspect the blast in Pune on Saturday was set off by Indian Mujahideen as part of the `Karachi Project' - a plot by the Lashkar-e-Taiba involving fugitive Indian jihadis and serving and retired officers of the Pakistan army aimed at keeping up the offensive against India.

Sources in security agencies believe that the Southern Brigade of Indian Mujahideen which comprises absconding IM terrorists Abdus Subhan Qureshi and Mohsin Chaudhary - a Pune resident - could have been behind the explosion in the landmark German Bakery that left nine dead.
The assessment is based on similarities with other terror attacks carried out by IM which was floated by Lashkar to camouflage its hand in the continued terror campaign against India. The date of the attack is part of the pattern that the group has followed since the serial blasts it engineered in Jaipur in 2008 - that is to strike either on 13th on 26th. The last five major attacks, including 26/11, have happened on these two dates. The only significant deviation was the attack in Bangalore on July 25, 2008.

Second, they have always struck in the evening hours and have involved blasts, with the exception of 26/11 which was a frontal assault by Pakistani gunmen.

But there are other reasons as well why agencies are veering around to the IM angle. The intelligence with them suggests that IM leaders who are part of the `Karachi Project' have been under pressure for sometime to resume their activities. As part of the project, which was revealed by American Lashkar jihadi David Headley to his FBI interrogators, fugitive IM leaders Bhatkal brothers - Riaz and Iqbal - Mufti Sufiyan and Rasool Parti are being sheltered in Karachi by Lashkar. Headley, who recceed Chabad House close to German Bakery, had also told FBI interrogators about serving and retired officers of Pakistan army being part of the project.

Mohammad Amjad Khwaja, a leading IM jihadi from Hyderabad who was lodged in Pakistan by Lashkar as part of the Karachi Project and was recently arrested after reaching here, told his interrogators that he and his associates were shown videos of Pune's Osho Ashram and Mumbai's Blue Synagogue.

The IM leaders could have settled on Pune also because the outfit has always had a strong presence in the city. Some of the prominent ones - techies Mohammed Mansoor Asgar Peerbhoy who headed the `media wing' of the group, Mohammad Atiq Mohammad Iqbal and Anik Shafiq Sayyad, and Anwar Abdulganj Bagwan, an MBBS doctor from a local hospital - are in prison. But Mohsin Chaudhary, known to agencies, along with other foot soldiers from the city and other parts of Maharashtra as well as Karnataka, have so far dodged the police hunt. Union home ministry identified the fugitives on the run as Mohammad Ali, Amin, Irfan and Abu Rashid.


Jai Hind
Rahul Vallamber

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Terror Threat to Vaishnodevi: CRPF




The cave shrine of Vaishnodevi, one of the most revered places of worship visited by about eight million pilgrims each year, faced a fresh terror threat and security has been beefed up.

Central Reserve Police Force's (CRPF) Special Director General N K Tripathi on Tuesday warned of the threat to the hill shrine, about 61 kms from here, saying it is on the radar of militants.

"There is a threat to the cave shrine of Vaishnodevi from militants. We have received inputs that militants want to do some mischief," he told reporters.

"Elaborate security measures are in place as per the threat perception. There is no laxity on part of the CRPF," he said, adding "the shrine is secured and safe, so pilgrims need not fear. They can undertake pilgrimage as CRPF is there for their security".

CRPF jawans have been put on high level of alert and are already keeping a hawk's vigil from the days in the run up to Republic Day on January 26 in Trikuta hills, the abode of the holy shrine, Tripathi said.

To a question, he said CRPF is main security agency providing security cover to the shrine an entire battalion is standing guard. A CRPF battalion usually comprises 1,000 personnel.

There is always a change in the strategy as per threat perception from time to time, Tripathi said.

"I had visited the shrine for security review after the threat inputs. There is frisking of pilgrims, round the clock patrolling, check points, nakas and electronic surveillance at the shrine and around it," he said.


Jai Hind
Rahul Vallamber