Monday, January 14, 2013

Pak troops kill two jawans, behead one IB Had Tipped Off Army On Infiltration Bid


Rajat Pandit & Josy Joseph TNN


New Delhi: An Indian soldier was beheaded and another killed by Pakistani troops after they crossed over into Indian territory in the Mendhar sector of Jammu & Kashmir on Tuesday, in a grim reminder of the brutality perpetrated during the 1999 Kargil conflict which can make peace making even more difficult.
    The Pakistani Army’s “border action team’’ took advantage of the thick fog in the thickly-forested mountainous region to sneak 500 to 600 metres across the Line of Control (LoC) before they were driven back after a fierce gun-battle and close-quarter combat with Indian troops that lasted over 30 minutes shortly before noon on Tuesday.
    The incursion and ceasefire violation seemed to be a diversionary manoeuvre to push infiltrators into J&K, as has been the earlier practice of the Pakistani Army. But, it met with stiff resistance from the Indian troops who, tipped off by the Intelligence Bureau, were fully alert to thwart any nefarious design.
    After the gun battle, the bodies of Lance-Naiks Hemraj and Sudhakar Singh, part of an “area domination patrol’’ of the 13 Rajputana Rifles, were found. One of them
was badly “mutilated’’. Although the Army did not give more details of the barbarism, sources said the retreating Pakistani soldiers had “chopped off the head’’ of one of the Indian soldiers and taken it back with them.
    An outraged Indian Army dubbed the crime “yet another grave provocation’’ by the Pakistanis, and said that the matter would be “taken up sternly through official channels’’. Given the gravity of the situation, PM Manmohan Singh, who was in Kochi this afternoon, was briefed over the phone.“We condemn the provocative action. The government will take up the incident with the Pakistan government. We expect Islamabad to honour the ceasefire agreement (which came into force in November 2003) strictly,’’ the defence ministry said.
    Predictably, the Pakistan military denied its troops had crossed over into India or indulged in a truce violation on Tuesday.
India to summon Pak official
NewDelhi:“It looks like Indian propaganda to divert world attention from the raid conducted by Indian troops on one of our posts on Sunday, in which one of our soldiers was killed,’’ it said.
    But the decapitation of the Indian soldier on Tuesday evoked memories of the barbaric way in which during the 1999 Kargil conflict Captain Saurabh Kalia was tortured by his Pakistani captors who later handed over his badly mutilated body to India. Kalia’s father is still fighting to get Pakistan to punish the soldiers responsible for his son’s brutal torture.
    The defeat in Kargil did not chasten the Pakistani security establishment into mending its ways and stop violating the Geneva Convention which lays down how captured soldiers
should be treated. In February 2000, Pakistani terrorist and al-Qaida member Ilyas Kashmiri had led a raid on the Indian Army’s “Ashok Listening Post’’ in the Nowshera sector killing seven Indian soldiers.
    Even then, Kashmiri had taken back to Pakistan the head of a 24-year-old jawan, Bhausaheb Maruti Talekar of the 17 Maratha Light Infantry, as a trophy. He is believed to have been honoured by General Pervez Musharraf himself at a ceremony later.

    On Tuesday, the defence ministry said the directorgeneral of military operations (DGMO), Lt-General Vinod Bhatia, had taken up the issue “directly” with his Pakistani counterpart. With the PM landing back in New Delhi later on Tuesday, the ministry of external affairs is likely to summon a top Pakistani official on Wednesday to lodge a strong protest over the matter. Sources said Army chief General Bikram Singh briefed national security adviser Shivshankar Menon on the “significant escalation’’ in ceasefire violations by the Pakistan Army in recent days. “Pakistan Army is regularly giving covering fire to help terrorists infiltrate into J&K, especially in the Rajouri, Uri and Keran sectors. If there were 61 such violations in 2011, as many as 120 have been recorded in the last one year,’’ an official said.


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