Monday, 19 September 2016

Terrorists open fire at police check-post in Kashmir's Handwara

New Delhi: A police check-post in Handwara area of Jammu and Kashmir was attacked by terrorists on Monday night.
According to sources, unknown number of terrorists opened fire at the check-post at Langate in Handwara and fled the spot. Search operations are under way to locate them. No causalities have been reported in the incident.
The attack took place just a day after terrorists stormed an army base in Uri killing 18 soldiers. All four terrorists were also killed in the attack.

Goods train derails near Kollam, rail traffic along EKM-TVPM route affected

Kollam: Nine bogies of a goods train derailed near Karunagappalli station in the wee hours of Tuesday. As a result, all train services along the Ernakulam-Thiruvananthapuram route have been affected.
It is not clear what caused the accident. No one was injured in the mishap. The train which was carrying fertilizer from Thiruvananthapuram to Kottayam left Kollam station at 12.10 am on Tuesday.
There will be no cancellation of express trains, a statement from the railways said.
Trains fully canceled on Tuesday
1. Kollam-Alappuzha passenger leaving Kollam at 03.30 hrs (56300)
2. Alappuzha-Ernakulam passenger leaving Alappuzha at 07.20 hrs (56302)
3. Ernakulam-Alappuzha passenger leaving Ernakulam at 15.35 hrs (56303)
4. Alappuzha-Kollam passenger leaving Alappuzha at 17.15 hrs (56301)
5. Kollam-Ernakulam passenger leaving kollam at 04.20 hrs (56392)
6. Ernakulam-Kayankulam passenger leaving Ernakulam at 11.30 hrs (56387)
Train partially canceled
1. Kottayam-Kollam passenger (56305) scheduled to leave Kottayam at 05.45 hrs will be partially canceled between Kayamkulam and Kollam

മൈക്കല്‍ ചോപ്രയുടെ ഗോളില്‍ തായ് ടീമിനെ തോല്‍പ്പിച്ച്‌ ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സ്


25ാം മിനിറ്റിലായിരുന്നു ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സിന്റെ വിജയഗോള്‍ വന്നത്. തുടര്‍ന്ന് തായ് ടീം തിരിച്ചടിക്കാന്‍ ശ്രമിച്ചെങ്കിലും സന്ദേശ് ജിങ്കാന്റെ നേതൃത്വത്തിലുള്ള പ്രതിരോധ നിരയെ മറികടക്കാനായില്ല

ബാങ്കോക്ക്: ഐ.എസ്.എല്‍ മൂന്നാം സീസണിന് മുന്നോടിയായുള്ള പരിശീലന മത്സരത്തില്‍ കേരള ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സിന് വിജയം. ഫ്രാ യുണൈറ്റഡ്, ബി.ഇ.സി ടെറോ സംയുക്ത ടീമിനെതിരെ മൈക്കല്‍ ചോപ്രയുടെ ഗോളിലാണ് ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സ് വിജയിച്ചത്.

25ാം മിനിറ്റിലായിരുന്നു ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സിന്റെ വിജയഗോള്‍ വന്നത്. തുടര്‍ന്ന് തായ് ടീം തിരിച്ചടിക്കാന്‍ ശ്രമിച്ചെങ്കിലും സന്ദേശ് ജിങ്കാന്റെ നേതൃത്വത്തിലുള്ള പ്രതിരോധ നിരയെ മറികടക്കാനായില്ല.

ഗ്രഹാം സ്റ്റോക്ക്, ആരോണ്‍ ഹ്യൂസ്, മുഹമ്മദ് റാഫി എന്നിവര്‍ ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സിനായി കളത്തിലിറങ്ങി.
ആദ്യ പരിശീലന മത്സരത്തില്‍ 2-1ന് വിജയിച്ചിരുന്ന ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സ് രണ്ടാം മത്സരത്തില്‍ സമനില വഴങ്ങിയിരുന്നു.


തായ്ലന്റില്‍ നിന്നും ടീം ഇന്ന് നാട്ടിലേക്ക് മടങ്ങും. ഒക്ടോബര്‍ ഒന്നിന് തുടങ്ങുന്ന ഐ.എസ്.എല്‍ ഉദ്ഘാടന മത്സരത്തില്‍ ബ്ലാസ്റ്റേഴ്സ് നോര്‍ത്ത് ഈസ്റ്റ് യുണൈറ്റഡിനെ നേരിടും. ഗുവാഹത്തിയിലാണ് മത്സരം.

Sunday, 18 September 2016

BJP May Face Heat from Opposition on National Security


New Delhi: The central government is likely to face heat on the issue of national security following Sunday's terror attack on an army camp in Jammu and Kashmir, with the opposition expected to target Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The BJP has prided itself as a strong nationalist force and its leaders had boasted how effectively Modi would respond to provocations from across the border if he were to take power.
The audacious attack on the army camp in Uri that left 17 soldiers dead and many injured has made the BJP vulnerable to attacks from an opposition itching to go on the offensive.
Rashtriya Janata Dal chief Lalu Prasad on Sunday took a dig at Modi and said his failure to tackle the situation in Jammu and Kashmir was to blame for the bloodbath at the army camp near Uri town.
"Modi ki laparwahi aur nakaami se jawan maare ja rahein hain. Kahan gaya Modi ka 56-inch ka seena? (Soldiers are dying due to Modi's failure and negligence. Where is his 56-inch chest?)" Lalu asked sarcastically.
Congress leader Manish Tewari took to Twitter to ask if Bharatiya Janata Party leaders would fulfil their claims of "taking care" of Pakistan.
"Outrage in Uri requires robust response PM. Can u walk rhetoric of muscularity? Biggest attack after 2002? Will India bleed in vain?" Tiwari said.
Pressure also mounted from within for the BJP.
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the ideological fountainhead of the party, said that "terrorists, their masters and their supporters should be dealt with firmly and conclusively".
The slaughter of 17 soldiers - after the death of seven military personnel at Pathankot in January and nine months after Modi made a dramatic trip to Lahore to wish birthday greetings to his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif - has put the BJP and Modi in a dilemma.
Home Minister Rajnath Singh and Finance Minister Arun Jatiley quickly blamed Pakistan for the killings. Pakistan denied the accusation while the US and Britain refrained from getting into blamegame even as they denounced the death of Indian soldiers.
Modi said those behind the Uri attack won't escape "unpunished" but political analysts said the government was likely to act in a manner that does not escalate into a conflict with Pakistan.
Political commentator S. Nihal Singh said the Modi government may go for a combination of military and diplomatic options.
"They will have to take some retaliatory step. They have to decide what kind of step it should be. On the diplomatic front, they have to decide whether to break off relations or not but that would be an extreme step," Nihal Singh told IANS.
He said the country expected some retaliation and that it has to come "reasonably soon", otherwise the "momentum will be gone". "How to calibrate a response without expanding the conflict. Basically, that is the problem."
Former diplomat Kuldip Nayar said the government may look for options that do not lead to war. Covert actions were possible.
"I don't think India will go to such an extent that they (Pakistan) are provoked into war," he said.
He did warn that the tense relationship with Pakistan would worsen after Sunday's killings.
Relations between India and Pakistan have been hit hard after Islamabad came out in support of the mass unrest in the Kashmir Valley following the killing of a militant in July.
And with Modi speaking aggressively in support of Baloch separatists in Pakistan, Islamabad and New Delhi appear to be in no mood to shake hands - for now.
If the BJP is not seen to be "punishing" Pakistan, the party will have a hard time explaining its nationalist credentials in assembly elections due next year in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Manipur, Uttarkhand and Goa.
Suspect in Infosys techie Swathi's murder found dead, suicide suspected


A man who was accused of hacking an Infosys employee to death at a railway station in July was found dead in his prison cell in a case of suspected suicide on Sunday.
Preliminary reports said Ramkumar, a 22-year-old engineer, bit a live wire jutting out of a switchboard in his cell block in Puzhal central prison. He was taken to a government hospital where he was declared brought dead, sources said.
Ramkumar, a resident of Thirunelveli district, was accused of murdering 24-year-old Swathi while she was waiting to board a train to work at the Nungambakkam railway station. According to then Chennai police commissioner TK Rajendran, Ramkumar was "infatuated" with the victim and was angry at being rejected by her.
He was arrested from his village in August after CCTV footage showed him near the crime scene following Swathi's murder. He had attempted to slit his throat at the time of arrest but was stopped by the police.
His parents, who had denied the charges against him, suspected foul play and called for a CBI probe into his death, a demand backed by VCK leader Thol Thirumavalavan.
Police were yet to file a final chargesheet in the case, which triggered widespread outrage in social media over the police's initial handling of the investigation and the poor security setup at the railway station.

17 jawans killed in Uri attack, 19 injured | Pix, video

Encounter in Uri
» Militants attacked an army camp at Kashmir's Uri killing 17 soldiers, in an attack worse than the recent Pathankot air base terror strike which frayed Indo-Pak ties. 
» Four militants were also neutralized 
» Initial reports suggest all terrorists killed in Uri attack were from Jaish-e-Mohammad: Army
» Home minister Rajnath Singh postpones visit to US, Russia. Rajnath says, 'Pakistan is a terrorist state and it should be identified and isolated as such'
» Home ministry issues alert for all airports across the country in wake of the terrorist attack in Uri
Uri/Srinagar: In the worst attack on the Army in many years, heavily armed militants suspected to be from Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) stormed an army base in Uri in Kashmir killing 17 jawans early Sunday, prompting prime minister Narendra Modi to assert that those responsible "will not go "unpunished.
Located barely a few kilometers from the Line of Control (LoC) and some 70 km from Srinagar, the base was subjected to the brazen attack by four terrorists at around 5.30 am, causing heavy casualties in the Dogra regiment which lost 17 of its men. 20 more army personnel were injured, some critically, and were airlifted to the army base hospital in Srinagar.
After the three-hour gunbattle, four terrorists were killed and army was combing to ensure there were no other militants. Most of the army casualties resulted from the fire in tents in which jawans were sleeping.
PM Modi condemns attack
India reacted strongly to the deadliest attack on the Army in Jammu and Kashmir in a quarter-century-old insurgency that sparked an outrage with Modi strongly condemning it.
"We strongly condemn the cowardly terror attack in Uri. I assure the nation that those behind this despicable attack will not go unpunished," Modi tweeted.
Rajnath reviews Uri situation
Union home minister Rajnath Singh pointed a finger directly at Pakistan, saying it is a "terrorist state" and should be isolated while BJP leader Ram Madhav said days of strategic restraint are over and suggested that "for one tooth, the complete jaw" should be the policy after the attack.
Soon after the news of the attack broke, army chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag rushed to Uri followed soon by defense minister Manohar Parrikar, who cut short his Goa visit. Parrikar was briefed at Army's headquarters in Srinagar.
Leaders across the political spectrum including Congress president Sonia Gandhi condemned the attack. President Pranab Mukherjee said India will not be cowed down by such attacks and that it will thwart the evil designs of terrorists and their backers.
The attack at the administrative base of the 10 Dogra, which top army officials described as a "serious setback", was launched at 0530 hours and ended at 0830 hours with the killing of four terrorists and martyrdom of 17 soldiers.
Explosions and gunfire erupted as the militants attacked the camp, which is located barely few meters away from the Army's Brigade Headquarters in Uri town.
The jawans of the Dogra Regiment were sleeping in a tent which caught fire due the explosion. The fire also engulfed the nearby barracks, official sources said.
DGMO Lt Gen Ranbir Singh called up his counterpart in Pakistan expressing "serious concerns" over Pakistani marking found on the equipment used by four "foreign" terrorists.
"All four killed were foreign terrorists and had carried with them items which had Pakistani markings. Initial reports indicate that the slain terrorists belong to Jaish-e-Mohammed tanzeem," Lt Gen Singh said in a brief statement to the media at South Block in Delhi.
He added that since "some the terrorists had some items with Pakistani markings, I have spoken to Pakistan DGMO and conveyed our serious concern on the same".
He said that the terrorists had fired incendiary ammunition along with automatic fire of small arms that led to army tents and temporary shelters catching fire.
"There have been a total of 17 Army fatal casualties. Of these, 13-14 casualties have been due to these tents/shelters having caught fire," he said.
Home minister Rajnath Singh also called an emergency Under Barrel Grenade Launchers along with a large number of other war like stores were recovered from the group of heavily armed terrorists.
He said that the operation for clearance of the area is still in progress and a very deliberate search is being carried out in the entire area around the military complex in Uri.
"As such, complete details of the operation are not yet available. However, the operation is being carried out by the Indian Army in a very professional manner and the Army personnel have displayed exceptionally high standards of courage and gallantry while neutralizing the terrorists," Lt Gen Singh said.
Amid reports that intelligence agencies had warned of a possible attack, he said all the intelligence agencies are working in close synergy with the security forces and regular intelligence inputs are received from concerned agencies and necessary action is being taken accordingly.
He said army chief Gen Dalbir Singh Suhag has visited the site of operation and taken an "on the ground" assessment of the situation.
"We salute the supreme sacrifice made by our brave soldiers following the highest traditions of Indian Army," he said.
The Army in a statement earlier in the day said a group of heavily armed terrorists targeted the rear administrative base of a unit at Uri.
"The administrative base had large strength of troops of units turning over after their tour of duty who were stationed in tents/temporary shelters which caught fire, and resulted in heavy casualties. We salute the sacrifice of 17 soldiers who were martyred in the operation," the statement added.
Uri attack may push Indo-Pak relations, already at their lowest, to a new low


The devastating attack in Uri carries shadows of the 2002 Kaluchak massacre, when three Lashkar-e-Taiba terrorists killed three army personnel, 18 members of their families, and ten other civilians in Jammu. That attack came months after the assault on Parliament in New Delhi, and nearly transformed a troop buildup - Operation Parakram - into a full-blown war between India and Pakistan.
This weekend's will also have serious consequences. It will strengthen the hand of those in the government, already on top, who believe that only intense, heightened pressure - diplomatic and perhaps otherwise - can force a change in Pakistan's behavior.
It will push India-Pakistan relations, already at their lowest ebb in years, to its lowest point since Mumbai. And it may signal the resurgence of old tactics in Kashmir, at a time when unarmed protesters have convincingly seized the mantle of armed terrorists.
The past decade has seen major terrorist attacks across India, though mass casualties have proven far easier to inflict on soft civilian targets in cities rather than military forces in their bases. The Pathankot attack in January killed 7 security personnel, which was half the number killed in a market in the Assam town of Kokrajhar last month. This is one reason why Uri's seventeen casualties are so shocking. While there have been larger numbers killed in the post-Kaluchak era, including the death of nineteen Border Security Force personnel in an IED attack in Kashmir in May 2004, this is likely the deadliest attack on a facility.
|More broadly, India has grown accustomed to steadily declining violence, both in Jammu and Kashmir and in the rest of India as a whole. Last year, the country saw the fewest civilians killed in terrorism for well over two decades, and the second-fewest security personnel - both falls probably driven by trends within Kashmir itself.
Average civilian casualties in Kashmir fell 45% from the 1990s to the 2000s, and then by a further 95% from the 2000s to the 2010s. Fatalities amongst the security forces fell from an average of more than 300 a year in the 2000s, to under 50 since 2010 - excluding Uri itself.
In part, these trends are the result of tighter control over the Line of Control. Official statistics last year showed that local militants outnumbered non-Indian ones. According to the head of the Srinagar-based Chinar corps, cross-border infiltration was down to a "trickle".
Attacks in Gurdaspur last year and Pathankot in January pointed to weaknesses in border security, but the scale of the problem has significantly fallen. Large, anomalous attacks like Uri shatter this statistical calm.
The Pathankot attack offered a brief moment of hope that India and Pakistan might handle the fall-out of these incidents in mature, constructive ways. The National Security Advisors of both countries spoke to one another within hours of the attack. Indian officials held back from blaming Pakistan, while Islamabad quickly detained the chief of Jaish-e-Mohammed, Masood Azhar. Most remarkably of all, Pakistan was allowed limited access to the airbase itself. But the steady collapse in India-Pakistan relations in the months thereafter, marked by reciprocal sniping on Kashmir and Balochistan, has produced a completely different mood that prevails today.
"," tweeted home minister Rajnath Singh on Sunday. There will be no joint investigation team (JIT), no forbearance in public statements, and little faith in Nawaz Sharif. The spirit of Lahore was snuffed out long ago.
"," promises Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Ram Madhav, the BJP's secretary general, suggests what this might mean in practice: "For one tooth, the complete jaw. ".
This echoes previous allusions to retaliation-in-kind, made by NSA Ajit Doval, defence minister Manohar Parrikar, and many other would-be covert warriors. In concert with the government's new approach to Balochistan, there is every reason to believe that the Research & Analysis Wing (R&AW) will be given a freer hand to impose a cost on Pakistani terrorist groups, their patrons in the Pakistani intelligence services, and perhaps even on the Pakistani state more broadly.
Among the more publicly visible consequences will be a further hardening of the government's approach to Kashmir. As counter-terrorism operations widen, protests - already the worst in the valley since the 1990s - will intensify. Another will be a ratcheting up of the diplomatic pressure on Pakistan. Sushma Swaraj's speech for the UN General Assembly in New York on September 26 will go through a frenzy of editing in the coming days.
India also knows that the United States is, as always, desperate to avert any escalation across the LoC; New Delhi can use that to secure greater intelligence and diplomatic cooperation from Washington, which supplied key information about Pathankot. If JeM is found responsible once more, India will revive its abortive efforts to get China to agree to a terrorist designation for Masood Azhar.
Uri is not a turning point. There will be no airstrikes or mass mobilisation. But it is a stepping stone towards what will be a more violent, unpredictable, and tumultuous period in India-Pakistan relations.