| |
SOUTH ASIA INTELLIGENCE REVIEW
Weekly Assessments & Briefings
Volume 14, No. 52, June 27, 2016


Data and
assessments from SAIR can be freely published in any form
with credit to the South Asia Intelligence Review of the
South Asia Terrorism Portal
|
Jharkhand:
Appearances and Reality
Mrinal
Kanta Das
Research
Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management
Two People's
Liberation Front of India (PLFI) cadres, identified as
Tene Bhengra and Deepak Bhengra, were lynched by tribal
villagers in Torpa block of the Khunti District on June
21, 2016. The PLFI cadres had come to Pandaria village
to collect levies from a local when they were confronted
by the villagers. Commenting on the incident, Khunti Superintendent
of Police (SP) Anish Gupta disclosed, "The villagers
who confronted the extremists became violent when the
extremists threatened to kill them. The extremists were
thrashed with sticks and other traditional weapons."
PLFI is a splinter group of the Communist Party of India-Maoist
(CPI-Maoist)
Earlier,
on June 17, 2016, a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF)
trooper belonging to the Commando Battalion for Resolute
Action (CoBRA) unit, identified as B. Harizen, was killed
in an encounter with the Communist Party of India-Maoist
(CPI-Maoist) in the forests of Patharchhapra under Pirtand
Police Station limits in the Giridih District
On May
12, 2016, a Chatra-based journalist – Akhilesh Pratap
Singh – was killed by Tritiya Prastuti Committee (TPC)
cadres over a payment dispute in the Chatra District.
The Jharkhand Police noted that Singh, a part-time contractor,
was killed after he allegedly failed to pay a 'levy' to
the TPC. TPC is another CPI-Maoist splinter
These killings
continue amidst the political and bureaucratic rhetoric
of finishing off Left-Wing Extremist (LWEs) groups in
the first six months of the current political dispensation
coming to power. There are around 19
LWE groups operating in the State,
including CPI-Maoist, PLFI and TPC. After taking the oath
as Jharkhand Chief Minister on December 28, 2014, Raghubar
Das had declared, on January 15, 2015, that his Government
would "rise to the challenge" posed by LWEs
and "decimate extremism and CPI-Maoist violence in
the State within six months". Going one step further,
the then Chief Secretary of Jharkhand Sajal Chakrabarty,
on January 14, 2015, boasted at a Press Conference in
Ranchi that "In three months, there will be no active
Naxal activity here. For me, the best Naxalite
is a dead Naxalite."
According
to the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP) database
since the Raghubar Das Government came to power, 97 persons,
including 27 civilians, 14 Security Force (SF) personnel
and 56 LWEs have lost their lives in the State. Since
2005, 1,417 people, including 605 civilians, 319 SF personnel
and 493 LWEs have been killed in Jharkhand (data till
June 27, 2016)
In the
first nearly six months of 2016 [data till June 26], 39
persons, including 11 civilians, nine SF personnel and
19 LWEs, have been killed in the State, as against 44
persons, including 12 civilians, two SF personnel and
30 LWEs killed in the corresponding period of 2015. The
killing of a larger number of SF personnel in 2016, as
against the figure for the same period in 2015, and fewer
LWEs, should be worrying
An overview
of fatalities over the last six years shows that, since
2011, Jharkhand has accounted for 224 LWE-linked fatalities,
including 100 of the CPI-Maoist (43.25 per cent), and
16 PLFI cadres, two TPC cadres, one Jharkhand Sangharsh
Jan Mukti Morcha (JSJMM) cadre. The combined percentage
of PLFI, TPC and JSJMM cadres killed in Police encounters
amounts to 9.82 per cent. 89 LWEs were killed in fratricidal
fighting (39.26 per cent); 11 were lynched by the public;
and five deaths resulted from accidental blasts.
Percentage
of Maoists Vs other LWEs killed in encounter with SFs
in Jharkhand: 2011-2016
Year
|
Maoist
|
%
total Maoist fatality |
Other LWEs
|
%
PLFI, TPC, JSJMM fatality
|
Fratricide
|
%
Fratricidal killing
|
Lynch
|
Accident
|
Total
|
PLFI
|
TPC |
JSJMM |
2011
|
31
|
64.58
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
2.08
|
14
|
29.16
|
2
|
0
|
48
|
2012
|
10
|
38.46
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
3.84
|
12
|
46.15
|
3
|
0
|
26
|
2013
|
22
|
38.59
|
4
|
2
|
0
|
10.52
|
24
|
42.10
|
3
|
2
|
57
|
2014
|
9
|
24.32
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
5.40
|
26
|
70.27
|
0
|
0
|
37
|
2015
|
21
|
56.75
|
4
|
0
|
0
|
10.81
|
8
|
21.62
|
1
|
3
|
37
|
2016
|
7
|
36.84
|
4
|
0
|
1
|
26.31
|
5
|
26.31
|
2
|
0
|
19
|
Total
|
100
|
43.25
|
16
|
2
|
1
|
9.82
|
89
|
39.26
|
11
|
5
|
224
|
* Source: SATP; * Data till June 26, 2016 .
|
Significantly,
there is little difference (3.99 per cent) between the
number of Maoists killed in encounters with SF personnel
and fratricidal fights. In fact, larger numbers of LWEs
were killed in fratricidal fights in 2012, 2013 and 2014,
than in SF operations. Worse, despite knowing that various
LWE groups other than CPI-Maoist also have a vice-like
grip over much of the State, the Government has hardly
gone after such groups. Just 19 PLFI, TPC and JSJMM cadres
have been killed in the Jharkhand in the last six years.
Further, dissection of the data suggests that, in 2016
alone, seven of the 11 civilians killed, fell to PLFI
cadres, two to TPC, two to CPI-Maoist, and one civilian
died in Maoist-PLFI cross fire.
Against
this backdrop, the State Government’s decision on June
18, 2016, to strike off several 'armed groups' from the
official list of LWE organisations and declare them ‘rogue
groups’ is questionable. Having to contain these groups
as LWE actors, it is not clear how state Forces neutralize
them under their new designation as criminal outfits.
The delisting of these groups appears intended to bring
down LWE-linked fatality numbers, but would fail to tackle
the real issue. Significantly, this is not the first time
such redefinitions have been attempted. On May 18, 2014,
Jharkhand's then officiating Chief Secretary Sajal Chakraborty
had declared that Jharkhand's LWE "threat (is) blown
out of proportion" because criminal acts committed
by Maoist splinter groups, without ideological moorings,
simply inflated the number of violent incidents. It was
said that only the CPI-Maoist will remain on the LWE list
while splinter groups like Jharkhand Prastuti Committee
(JPC), Sangharsh Janmukti Morcha (SJMM), Sashastra People's
Morcha (SPM), Revolutionary Communist Centre (RCC), Jharkhand
Janmukti Parishad (JJMP), PLFI and TPC may be dropped,
though the proposal was not pursued at that stage.
Nevertheless,
LWEs in Jharkhand do realise that the going is increasingly
becoming tougher not just in the
state but also in other theatres of
conflict in India, including Chhattisgarh
, the epicentre of Maoist violence.
The opening
of two CRPF camps in the Saranda Forest – which had a
dominant CPI-Maoist presence in 2009-11 – on June 20,
2016, just one kilometre from the Odisha border, will
go a long way in preventing cross-border movement and
strengthening anti-LWE operations. The camps in the Nuagaon
and Tirilposhi areas of Saranda in the West Singhbhum
District of Jharkhand will fill up the security ‘vacuum’
in vulnerable forest pockets used by LWEs to operate on
both sides of the State border.
Media reports
on June 18, 2016, indicated that, to augment their capability
and effectiveness, the top Maoist leadership has sent
one of its senior leaders, Sudhakaran, to Jharkhand from
Andhra Pradesh, to rebuild the organization. A source
in the State Intelligence Department disclosed that Sudhakaran
had reached Jharkhand and was engaged in activities to
revive the party and motivate armed cadres
On June
22, 2016, a media report claimed that officials of the
National Investigation Agency (NIA), who were probing
arms smuggling in India’s North-eastern states, had come
across evidence that the Maoists operating in Jharkhand
had been supplied with sophisticated M-16 rifles. Sources
indicated that the weapons were sourced from Nagaland
and transported to the CPI-Maoist in Jharkhand by arms
syndicates.
Despite
the resolve of recent Jharkhand Governments to fight CPI-Maoist
and other LWE formations – after years
of ambivalence under predecessor regimes
– the rebels have retained the strength and resilience
to spread their influence in 21 of the 24 Districts across
Jharkhand. Through 2015, SFs did make considerable inroads
against these groups, but the problem is far from over
and will demand hard operational strategies to overcome,
not the fudging of data by redefining categories of LWE
groups and activities.
|
Glut
of Drugs
Tushar
Ranjan Mohanty
Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management
On June
22, 2016, the Sargodha District Police of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
(KP) claimed to have arrested sixteen drugs dealers, recovering
narcotics and illegal weapons. A Police spokesman disclosed
that during a continued drive against drug pushers and
criminals, special teams of different Police Stations
conducted raids within their jurisdictions and arrested
the 16 accused, recovering over 2.5 kilograms of hashish,
1.5 kilos of heroin, 10,000 bottles of liquor, six 30
bore Pistols, two .32 bore Revolvers, one Kalashnikov
rifle, and one Carbine, along with bullets and cartridges.
On June
12, 2016, the Anti-Narcotics Force (ANF) conducted 11
operations and recovered a huge cache of narcotics weighing
1.16 tons worth PKR 7.6 billion in the Interntional Market.
The seized drugs included 1.147 tons heroin, 17 kilograms
of hashish and 2.4 kilograms of opium. ANF also arrested
12 persons, including four women, involved in drug smuggling
during the operations. These operations were launched
at Rawalpindi, Attock, Nowshehra, Peshawar, Hyderabad,
Karachi and Pishin.
On June
6, 2016, ANF recovered 20 kilograms of heroin, 716 kilograms
of hashish, 1.3 kilograms of methamphetamine and 4.8 kilograms
of opium in 16 operations at Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Attock,
Lahore, Multan, Dera Ismail Khan, Peshawar, Nowshehra,
Karachi and Quetta. During the operations, ANF also arrested
21 persons, including three foreigners, while seven vehicles
were seized. The value of seized narcotics was PKR 577
million in the international market
On May
31, 2016, ANF recovered 2.28 tons of narcotics worth ten
billion rupees from different parts of the country. According
to details, in six intelligence-based operations at Lasbella,
Qilla Saifullah, Chaghi, Faisalabad and Gilgit, ANF arrested
four accused including a woman and seized two loaded vehicles.
On May
26, 2016, ANF recovered a huge stash of narcotics from
the Malir town area of Karachi, the provincial capital
of Sindh. Acting on a tipoff, ANF conducted a raid and
was able to seize 442 kilograms of charas and 13 kilograms
of opium.
A report
on the mid-year performance of the ANF revealed on June
14, 2016, that 49.12 tonnes of drugs, worth PKR 3.985
billion, had been recovered during the preceding six months.
These included 2.233 tonnes of heroin, 33.248 tons of
hashish, 7.703 tonnes of opium, 1.443 tonnes of morphine,
1.62 kilograms of cocaine, 931.87 kilograms of amphetamine,
6.085 kilograms of methamphetamine, 790 Ecstasy tablets
and 28,550 Xanax tablets. During the period, 426 cases
were registered and 506 drug criminals were arrested.
These cases included 57 cases at airports and 11 cases
of parcel consignments destined for receivers abroad.
A special
Anti-Drug Drive was also launched in April 2016 with a
particular focus on the educational institutions in Islamabad
and all provincial Capitals, which helped ANF recover
drugs worth PKR 1.17 billion in the international market.
In this connection, 136 operations were conducted by ANF
across Pakistan, resulting in the arrest of 155 drug suppliers
and the seizure of 19 vehicles. During these operations,
1.344 tons of narcotics were recovered, including 44.726
kilograms of heroin, 1,274.775 kilograms of hashish, 23.150
kilograms of opium and 1.120 kilograms of cocaine. The
majority of the operations were undertaken in Islamabad,
Rawalpindi, Jhelum, Lahore, Attock, Haripur, Peshawar,
Kohat, Multan, Gilgit, Sukkur, Karachi, Quetta and Qilla
Abdullah.
A massive
volume of drugs recovered from several parts of the country
by the ANF, apparently accumulated over five years of
seizures, from 2011-2015, was destroyed on April 18, 2016.
Balochistan was on top of the list with 492 tons of drugs
destroyed, with Sindh following with 111 tons. KP was
in the third position with 91 tons; while 63 tons were
discovered and destroyed in Punjab. Official sources indicate
that larger amounts of narcotics were impounded in 2015,
as against 2014. In 2015, more than 261 tons of narcotics
were seized, while 123 tons were seized in 2014. 2013
saw 130 tons of narcotics’ seizures, while 119 tons were
seized in 2012.
Afghanistan
is the world's largest opium producer, accounting for
some 70 per cent (3,300 tons) of global opium production,
according to the United Nations World Drug Report of 2016.
The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) Report
2015 said that 40 per cent of the drugs (heroin and marijuana)
originating in Afghanistan are routed through Pakistan
en route to China, the Gulf States, Africa, and Europe.
According to the same report, there are anywhere between
300 and 500 heroin-producing factories operating in Afghanistan,
mostly located in the provinces of Helmand and Nimroz
near the border with Pakistan. There is no presence of
the anti-narcotics department on the Pakistani side along
these areas.
Media reports
suggest that the drugs smuggled from Afghanistan to the
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), KP and Balochistan
are used by terrorist formations. An unnamed local journalist
claimed, “The Restoril capsule is used by the local militants’
organisations to energise their fighters and make them
brave and bold for the missions,” adding that the medicine
is used to motivate young men to undertake suicide attacks.
Sources claimed that several Afghan drug-peddlers and
officials of the border posts and other agencies were
involved in the business.
For long,
in addition to extortion and kidnappings for ransom, the
greatest source of income for terrorist groups based in
KP, Peshawar and Frontier Region (FR) Peshawar has been
the ‘taxation’ of narcotics. A confidential report prepared
by law-enforcement agencies on May 19, 2014, noted, “International
efforts to curb militants’ access to foreign funds have
forced such organisations to rely on criminal activities
to cover their expenses.” The report identified three
terrorist groups working in and around Peshawar: Lashkar-e-Islam
(LI) in Bara, Khyber Agency; Tariq Afridi group of Tehreek-e-Taliban
Pakistan (TTP)
based in FR Peshawar and Darra Adam Khel in FR Kohat;
and Mohmand chapter of TTP based in the Mohmand Agency
and the Kunar Province of Afghanistan. According to the
report, LI was indirectly involved in the sale and purchase
of narcotics and organised a hashish fair in Orakzai
Agency three times a week. Similarly, drug transporters
were ‘taxed’ by banned outfits in areas under their control.
LI charged PKR 1,330 on a kilogram of hashish as ‘tax’,
while another terrorist group, Amar Bil Maroof, popularly
known as the ‘Namdar group’, charged PKR 100 per kilogram.
On December
9, 2014, United States (US) officials had pointed out
that TTP could also be using drug money to finance its
activities. “The logic is rather overwhelming. Drug traffickers
have a substantial presence in the region where the Taliban
(TTP) also operate,” Dawn reported on December
9, 2014, while quoting an unnamed senior US official who
was part of the delegation of Ambassador William R. Brownfield,
Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics
and Law Enforcement Affairs. “Obviously, TTP is earning
revenue, when an illicit drug moves through their areas.
We are almost 100 per cent certain that they are,” the
official added.
The claim
was reinforced when TTP targeted Tehsildar (revenue
official) Faramosh Khan, who was on an anti-poppy drive
along with ANF officials and USAID campaigners in the
Ambar Tehsil area of Mohmand Agency in FATA, when
an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) device planted on
the roadside exploded on March 1, 2016. The Jama’at-ul-Ahrar
(JuA) faction of TTP claimed responsibilityThe two USAID
campaigners were killed while Tehsildar Faramosh and an
ANF official sustained injuries.
On February
18, 2016, two Police officers were shot dead by unidentified
terrorists in the Machni area of Mohmand Agency in FATA.
Earlier,
on 26 November 2012, Lance Naik Azad Khan was shot dead
by unidentified assailants during an Anti-narcotics Operation
in the Nullah area of Quetta, the provincial capital of
Balochistan.
On 13 January
2011, Havildar Farooq Ahmed of the Quetta Regional Directorate,
ANF, was shot dead by two unidentified assailants in the
main bazaar of Panjgur town of Balochistan.
The involvement
of Police officials in the drug trade has also been in
evident. On February 19, 2016, for instance, the Special
Branch of Sindh Police revealed that an Assistant Superintendent
of Police (ASP), Bilal Qayyum, who was posted at Kiamari
Town, Karachi, was found to be the ring leader of a drug
dealing gang.
With the
sheer volumes of drug movement within the country, drug
addiction in Pakistan is at an alarming level. According
to Dr. Darya Khan Leghari of Sir C.J Institute of Psychiatry,
there are nine million drug addicts in Pakistan, out of
which two million are in the age band of 15 to 25 years.
Leghari asserted that drug abuse was growing rapidly,
especially among youth, including those in colleges and
universities, resulting in serious social and health implications.
Almost five per cent of the adult population of the country
is already addicted, putting Pakistan at the top of the
list among countries affected by this scourge. Leghari
claimed that the reason behind the alarmingly increasing
number of drug addicts in Pakistan was that the drug cartels
were fully backed and supported by powerful, wealthy and
influential persons.
The situation
appears to be even worse than Leghari suggests. The Senate
Standing Committee on Interior and Narcotics Control was
told on July 6, 2015, that around seven million people
in Pakistan were drug addicts, and that 700 persons die
every day in the country due to drug-related complications.
The Committee, chaired by Senator Rehman Malik, was briefed
by the Director General (DG) of ANF on the steps undertaken
by the Narcotics Control Division for the welfare of those
suffering from addiction.
Recognising
the problem of the growing nexus between terrorists, drugs
peddlers and their facilitators, Chief of the Army Staff
(COAS) General Raheel Sharif declared on August 3, 2015,
We will break the nexus between drug dealers, financiers
and perpetrators of terrorism... We will not allow these
drug barons to negatively influence and spoil our future
generations."
The large
volumes of drugs seized by state agencies, and the significant
numbers of arrests, represent the tip of the iceberg in
Pakistan. They would have little impact on the total volume
of the trade as long as the roots of the problem in the
Pakistan backed instability and terrorism across Afghanistan
are not recognized, and the collusion of state entities
and elites within Pakistan is not addressed.
|
Weekly Fatalities: Major
Conflicts in South Asia
June
20-26, 2016
|
Civilians
|
Security
Force Personnel
|
Terrorists/Insurgents
|
Total
|
BANGLADESH
|
|
Islamist Terrorism
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
1
|
INDIA
|
|
Jammu and
Kashmir
|
0
|
8
|
11
|
19
|
Manipur
|
2
|
0
|
0
|
2
|
Left-Wing
Extremism
|
|
Chhattisgarh
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
1
|
Jharkhand
|
0
|
0
|
2
|
2
|
Total (INDIA)
|
3
|
8
|
13
|
24
|
PAKISTAN
|
|
Balochistan
|
7
|
1
|
0
|
8
|
KP
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
6
|
Sindh
|
2
|
0
|
6
|
8
|
Total (PAKISTAN)
|
|
|
|
|
Provisional
data compiled from English language media sources.
|

BANGLADESH
Bangladesh
and
US
agree
to
enhance
cooperation
in
areas
of
counter-terrorism
and
countering
violent
extremism:
Bangladesh
and
the
US
on
June
23
agreed
to
enhance
cooperation
in
the
areas
of
counter-terrorism
and
countering
violent
extremism
through
capacity
enhancement.
The
agreement
came
on
the
first
day
of
the
fifth
Partnership
Dialogue
between
the
two
countries
which
began
at
the
US
Department
of
State
in
Washington,
DC.
Foreign
Secretary
M
Shahidul
Haque
said
"It
is
a
global
problem
and
we
agreed
to
combat
it
jointly."
Dhaka
Tribune,
June
25,
2016.
Government
has
taken
policy
of
zero
tolerance
against
terrorism
and
militancy,
says
Prime
Minister
Sheikh
Hasina:
Prime
Minister
Sheikh
Hasina
in
reply
to
a
supplementary
question
in
Parliament
on
June
22
said
that
the
Government
has
taken
a
policy
of
zero
tolerance
against
terrorism
and
militancy
with
a
vow
to
do
everything
needed
to
fight
the
problems.
She
told
"Bangladesh
will
do
everything
necessary
to
fight
the
twin
demons
[terrorism
and
militancy].
We
have
adopted
a
zero
tolerance
policy
in
this
regard."
Dhaka
Tribune,
June
23,
2016.

INDIA
India's
SCO
status
will
help
protect
region,
asserts
Indian
Prime
Minister
Narendra
Modi:
As
India
on
June
24,
formally
sat
down
to
sign
a
memorandum
of
obligation
to
join
the
Shanghai
Cooperation
Organisation
(SCO)
in
Tashkent,
(Uzbekistan)
Indian
Prime
Minister
(PM)
Narendra
Modi
called
for
partnership
among
the
member
countries
to
protect
societies
from
the
threats
of
radical
ideologies
of
hate,
violence
and
terror.
In
his
address
at
the
SCO
summit,
Modi
said
with
India
as
its
full
member,
SCO
boundaries
would
stretch
from
the
Pacific
to
Europe
and
from
the
Arctic
to
the
Indian
Ocean.
New
Indian
Express,
June
25,
2016.
220
militants
including
100
locals
active
in
J&K,
says
Army:
Army
stated
that
around
220
militants
including
100
locals
are
active
in
Kashmir
valley.
They
said
that
they
have
strong
intelligence
network
and
militants
who
succeed
in
infiltrating
are
killed
in
forests
itself.
Commander
8-Sector
of
Rashtriya
Rifles
(RR),
Brigadier
Rajeev
Puri,
on
June
24,
while
briefing
about
the
Army's
successful
operations
in
Kupwara
District
said:
"About
200
to
220
militants
are
active
in
Kashmir
valley.
Among
them,
about
100
are
local
militants
and
rests
are
foreigners."
Brigadier
Puri
said
the
number
of
militants
in
South
and
North
Kashmir
varied
as
they
do
not
have
boundaries.
Daily
Excelsior,
June
25,
2016.
For
Indian
jihadis,
a
safe
'door'
to
Pakistan
from
Iran,
says
report:
A
mosque
with
its
entry
gate
inside
Iran
in
the
Rituk
border
area
and
a
backdoor
exit
that
opens
up
in
Pakistani
territory
had
been
used
by
at
least
three
Indian
terrorists
to
enter
Pakistan
from
Iran.
Counter-terror
agencies
now
suspect
that
this
may
be
the
traditional
route
through
which
many
more
Indian
jihadis
may
have
entered
Pakistan
to
enlist
in
the
terror
camps
in
the
restive
FATA
(Federally
Administered
Tribal
Areas)
region.
Deccan
Chronicle,
June
25,
2016.
Government
extends
peace
pact
with
NDFB-P
for
another
six
months:
The
pact
for
Suspension
of
Operations
with
the
insurgent
group,
Progressive
faction
of
National
Democratic
Front
of
Bodoland
(NDFB-P)
was
on
June
23
extended
by
the
government
till
December
31,
2016.
A
meeting
of
Joint
Monitoring
Group
consisting
of
representatives
of
the
Centre,
Government
of
Assam
and
NDFB-P
was
held
in
New
Delhi.
The
observance
of
agreed
ground
rules
for
suspension
of
the
operations
was
reviewed.
The Shillong
Times,
June
24,
2016.
Pro-IS
United
Cyber
Caliphate
releases
kill
list,
including
285
Indian
nationals:
As
many
as
285
Indian
nationals
have
been
named
in
a
list
of
4000
odd
targets
put
forth
by
the
pro-Islamic
State
(IS)
group.
This
isn't
the
first
time
when
a
terror
group
has
propounded
such
a
list.
According
to
a
report,
the
target
list
has
been
produced
by
pro-IS
United
Cyber
Caliphate
and
released
on
Telegram,
the
terror
outfit's
private
channel.
The
list
has
names
and
personal
details
of
individuals
to
be
killed.
The
data
has
been
collated
from
open
sources
available
online.
The Asian Age,
June
23,
2016.
145
militants
including
54
foreigners
active
in
Jammu
and
Kashmir
while
4,587
Kashmiri
youths
have
crossed
over
to
PoK,
says
Chief
Minister
Mehbooba
Mufti:
Chief
Minister
Mehbooba
Mufti,
who
also
holds
Home
portfolio,
in
reply
to
a
question
by
Rajesh
Gupta
in
the
Legislative
Assembly
on
June
21
said
that
145
militants,
including
54
foreigners,
are
active
in
Jammu
and
Kashmir
while
4,587
Kashmiri
youths
have
crossed
over
to
Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir
(PoK).
The
reply
said
that
reportedly
145
militants
are
active
in
the
State,
out
of
which
91
are
locals
and
54
foreigners.
The
reply
said
that
489
youth
along
with
their
wives
and
children
have
returned
from
PoK
and
Pakistan
to
Jammu
and
Kashmir
via
Nepal
with
effect
from
2003
till
May
22,
2016.
Daily Excelsior
,
June
22,
2016.
Pakistan's
concerns
on
India's
role
in
Afghanistan
are
'overestimated,'
states
the
Special
US
Representative
for
Afghanistan
and
Pakistan,
Richard
Olson:
Pakistan's
concerns
on
India's
role
in
Afghanistan
are
"overestimated,"
the
Special
US
Representative
for
Afghanistan
and
Pakistan,
Richard
Olson
stated
on
June
21.
He
warned
that
Pakistan
will
not
have
a
"bright
future"
unless
it
takes
action
against
terror
groups
like
Afghan
Taliban
and
the
Haqqani
network.
"India
has
been
a
supportive
partner
for
Afghanistan.
It
has
provided
a
limited
amount
but
important
military
assistance
(to
Afghanistan),"
Olson
added.
Times
of
India,
June
22,
2016.

NEPAL
Talks
between
Government
and
agitating
33-party
Rastriya
Morcha
end
positively:
Talks
between
the
Government
and
the
agitating
33-party
Rastriya
Morcha
have
ended
positively
at
Prime
Minister's
Office
in
Kathmandu
on
June
23.
Formed
before
the
second
Constituent
Assembly
(CA),
Shovram
Thapa
has
been
leading
the
33-party
alliance
after
the
then
Mohan
Baidhya-led
Communist
Party
of
Nepal-Maoist
(CPN-Maoist)
left
the
group.
The
alliance
held
talks
with
the
Government
after
it
became
ready
to
take
ownership
of
the
Constitution
promulgated
by
the
CA.
My
Republica,
June
24,
2016.
CPN-Maoist
Center
expands
its
Central
Committee,
Politburo,
Secretariat
and
Headquarters:
Communist
Party
of
Nepal-Maoist
Centre
(CPN-Maoist
Center)
on
June
22
expanded
its
Central
Committee,
Politburo,
Secretariat
and
Headquarters.
Party
spokesperson
Pampha
Bhusal,
organizing
a
press
conference
in
Kathmandu
informed
that
now
the
party
would
have
a
1,499
Central
Committee,
which
the
party
has
been
naming
as
'General
Convention
Organizing
Committee'.
Likewise,
the
Politburo
would
have
299
members
and
the
Secretariat
99.
The
nine-member
Headquarters
has
also
been
expanded
into
the
33-member
body.
The
Himalayan
Times,
June
23,
2016

PAKISTAN
We
cannot
conquer
Kashmir
through
war,
says
former
Foreign
Minister
Hina
Rabbani
Khar:
Former
Foreign
Minister
Hina
Rabbani
Khar
in
an
interview
with
Geo
News
on
June
26
said
that
Pakistan
cannot
"conquer
Kashmir
through
war"
and
progress
on
the
issue
can
only
me
made
in
an
environment
of
mutual
trust
with
India.
"I
believe
that
Pakistan
cannot
conquer
Kashmir
through
war
and
if
we
cannot
do
that,
the
option
we
are
left
with
is
dialogue,
and
dialogue
can
only
proceed
with
a
partner
with
which
we
have
normal
relations
and
a
certain
level
of
mutual
trust,"
Khar
said,
maintaining
that
the
Kashmir
issue
can
be
resolved,
"If
we
continue
to
talk
on
the
issue,
then
we
will
reach
somewhere".
Dawn,
June
27,
2016.
Will
not
allow
any
country
to
use
proxies
against
Pakistan,
emphasises
CoAS
General
Raheel
Sharif:
Chief
of
Army
Staff
(CoAS),
General
Raheel
Sharif
during
his
visit
to
National
Defence
University,
in
Islamabad
on
June
24
emphasised
that
Pakistan
is
opposed
to
using
proxies
against
other
countries
and
will
also
not
allow
any
other
country
to
use
proxies
against
Pakistan.
"Remaining
steadfast,
and
with
an
enhanced
awareness
and
participation,
we
as
a
Nation
must
pursue
our
national
objective
of
zero
presence
of
terrorists
and
total
peace
at
any
cost."
he
said,
adding,
"The
contours
of
future
war
are
fast
changing.
While
our
enemies
are
stoking
terrorism
to
demoralise
us
and
destabilize
our
country,
we
are
united,
fully
determined
and
capable
of
defeating
their
nefarious
designs."
The News,
June
25,
2016.
Pakistan
left
alone
to
fight
terrorists,
says
DG
ISPR
Asim
Bajwa:
The
Director-General
(DG)
of
the
Inter-Service
Public
Relations
(ISPR)
Asim
Saleem
Bajwa
during
an
interview
with
Germany's
Deutsche
Welle
on
June
23
said
that
the
international
community
had
left
Pakistan
alone
to
fight
terrorists.
"I
would
say
that
the
international
community
has
not
done
enough
for
us,"
he
said.
Bajwa
said
that
Pakistan
army
was
conducting
Operation
Zarb-e-Azb
without
preference
to
any
militant
organisation.
According
to
him,
the
Haqqani
Network
was
also
being
targeted
in
the
operation.
"The
military
has
no
preferences.
We
are
targeting
terrorists
from
all
groups,"
he
said.
The Nation,
June
24,
2016.

SRI
LANKA
Sri
Lanka
Campaign
for
Peace
and
Justice
urges
Army
to
release
records
of
people
surrendered
to
security
forces
at
end
of
war
in
2009:
Sri
Lanka
Campaign
for
Peace
and
Justice,
a
global
non-partisan
movement,
issuing
a
statement
on
June
25
urged
the
Army
to
release
the
records
of
the
people
surrendered
to
the
security
forces
at
the
end
of
the
war
in
2009.
The
statement
said
it
has
been
almost
seven
years
since
the
conclusion
of
Sri
Lanka's
civil
war
and
there
are
still
many
questions
that
remain
unanswered
as
to
what
happened
to
the
many
hundreds
of
Liberation
Tigers
of
Tamil
Eelam
(LTTE)
'surrendees',
as
well
as
the
thousands
of
Tamil
civilians,
who
were
taken
into
the
custody
of
the
Army
at
the
end
of
the
war
and
whose
whereabouts
remain
unknown.
Colombo Page,
June
25,
2016.
The South
Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR) is a weekly service that
brings you regular data, assessments and news briefs on
terrorism, insurgencies and sub-conventional warfare, on
counter-terrorism responses and policies, as well as on
related economic, political, and social issues, in the South
Asian region.
SAIR is a project
of the Institute
for Conflict Management
and the
South
Asia Terrorism Portal.
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