Militants
increasingly focussing on Jammu and Kashmir Police
now
It was a routine thing to happen in
militancy-infested areas of Rajouri district. The
Pak-sponsored militants had gunned down two
civilians including a PHE employee and a newly
elected Sarpanch in Ghambir Mughlan village and
had issued diktat that nobody would dare perform
their last rites. The news about the innocent
civilians killings when reached Rajouri, a team of
28 persons including 26 Jammu and Kashmir
Police(JKP) jawans and two medical assistants (to
conduct the post-mortem) left immediately for
Ghambir Mughlan. As the militants have a very
strong communication network in the area, this
news reached them. And the massacre was waiting to
happen. At Ghaloti- midway Ghambir Mughlan and
Rajouri in Manjakote block, just a few
minutes ago two army trucks had passed through the
spot but were not touched by the mercenaries.
Instead the cops who dared to disobey the
militants' command were ambushed by them. Fifteen
policemen and the two medical assistants were
killed on the spot. Two cops who were trapped
inside the Tata Sumo carrying them to Ghambir
Mughlan, even could not take their positions in
the overcrowded vehicle. The Rajouri ambush was
the first major attack on the jawans of Jammu and
Kashmir police early this year. What followed it
was the attack on Police Control Room in Srinagar
in which 10 policmen were killed. And now the
recent fidayeen attack on the Poonch police
station which claimed seven lives of the
policemen. Well, these are not two or three
isolated cases. The Jammu and kashmir police which
had come to the fore as one of the pioneer forces
fighting insurgency in the valley under the
dynamic leadership of the then DGP Mr Gurbachan
Jagat, is now facing a tough time for the past few
months.Things do not seem to be moving smoothly
for over 50,000 police force in the trouble-torn
state of Jammu and Kashmir as most of the
policemen seem to have developed a sagging
morale.A couple of more such incidents, the
observers feel,and things would be very difficult.
The Pakistan-sponsored militant outfits who have
already declared a war on the military and
para-military forces in the state, have now
increasingly been focussing on the Jammu and
Kashmir police. More and more police personnel in
the state are becoming the targets of militants
bullets. In the past ten years so far, 3053
police and security forces personnel including 191
SPOs and 54 VDC members have lost their lives in
this proxy-war since its out-break. A total
of 516 of them have been officers and jawans of
J&K Police and the remaining 2292 of other
security forces. The data for this year (till 15
August) is also a pointer to the fact that the
killings of police and security forces jawans have
increased. As many as 359 police and security
forces personnel have lost their lives and 872
sustained injuries in counter-insurgency
operations across the state since January till
August 15 this year. The martyrs include 76
officers and Jawans of J&K police, 232
security forces personnel, 46 SPOs and five
village defence committee members. The casualties
have mostly occurred due to grenades and IED
explosions hurled and triggered by Pak sponsored
mercenaries during ambushes. The militants, on the
other hand, suffered three-fold casualties.
Police and security forces have eliminated 1059
militants, most of them foreign mercenaries,
during the period. 49 of the militants also
surrendered to the authorities alongwith arms and
ammunition. Four militants and two civilians died
in six inter-group clashes of militants. A total
of 209 incidents of abduction at the hands
of ultras have also been registered. Innocent
people have been made the target by militants to
create scare in the minds of peace loving people
of the state. Continuing with their tool of
terrorism, militants have killed 589 civilians, 99
of them in grenade attacks and explosions and 490
in firing. Besides, militants have inflicted
injuries on 1372 civilians with their firing and
explosions. 99 of the civilians have lost their
lives in cross firing between militants and
police/security forces from January to August 15
this year. Nothwithstanding the fact that the
Disturbed areas Act has been extended to entire
Jammu region, many political observers in J&K
feel that the situation is heading towards the one
that prevailed in Kashmir in early 90's when the
entire system had crumbled down. With various
outfits like LeT and Jeish-e-Mohammad having
threatened to intensify their suicidal and other
attacks in the state in the post-Agra period, the
entire focus is now on the state police.
"With the militant organisations openly
issuing threats to the state police, panic has
also gripped the families of the police personnel.
The police force which one had high morale is now
facing a peculiar situation. And the incidents
like Rajouri and Poonch are a gruesome reminder
for the rest of them and they do know what lies
next for them," feels Mr Chander Mohan
Sharma, vice-president, state BJP adding that not
only the police officials have laid down their
lives fighting militants, but even their families
have also paid the price. Take the case of
Inspector Altaf who along with the HT photographer
Pradeep Bhatia and many others, was killed in the
car bomb blast outside heavily guarded Residency
Road on 10 August last year .Sole bread earner for
his family, now his wife and three young daughters
are finding it very difficult to make both the
ends meet. Not only the regular state police force
but the Special Police Operations Group of the
J&K Police which was specially created in 1994
to fight insurgency, has come under focus also.
Though for many years the SOG did an excellent job
under the dynamic leadership of the then Inspector
General of Police Mr P.S. Gill( who has now been
posted elsewhere in the state and has been
promoted to ADGP), the SOG cops are also feeling
lost and directionless in the absence of some good
command. The six long months of ceasfire which
ended in May, also saw an increase in attacks and
killings of SOG officials. In May only, three SOG
cops-Inspector Kanwal Singh, Sub Insepector
Mohammad Amin and ASI Mohammad Sultan were killed
by the Lashkar men while they were basking in the
sun in the gardens of SOG Baramulla camp near
Pattan in North kashmir. Mr P.S.Gill, Additional
Director General of Police, J&K feels that the
state policd has come to increased focus of the
militants as it is the only force which has to
work on the roads all the time." Army and
other para military forces are mostly in the camps
but not the cop as he has to perform his duty in
the open ; a traffic cop has to stand at a
roundabout well aware of the fact that a bullet
can come from all the directions pierce his body
or even a fidayeen can emerge from
nowhere,"he says adding that the policemen
are the ones who have to yield actionable
intelligence which would then help the army and
para-military force. But isn't it that the
incidents like Fidayeen storming Police control
Room Srinagar on Police Station poonch which have
been forcing many of the JKP men to slink back to
the barracks? "Not that is not the case,”
says the ADGP who is known for his role in
crushing militancy from Kashmir valley. He adds
that when a fidayeen is ready to blow himself, no
security measures can help. However, he asserts
that the force has fully been energised and has
always been rady to take on any kind of challenge.
With renewed threats by various militant outfits,
the "energised" Jammu and Kashmir police
has now to use its capability to lead the other
forces into some solid action to nullify such
threats. They have to kill or get killed - that is
the rule of the war... even if it is a proxy war
initiated by Pakistan in the state of Jammu of
Kashmir. That is the golden rule.
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