Rajnath reviews J&K security situation
AGENCY
NEW DELHI: Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Tuesday reviewed the prevailing situation in Jammu and Kashmir, which witnessed a deadly attack on a CRPF convoy that left eight personnel dead, and directed security forces to intensify vigil in the state.
During the hour-long meeting, the Home Minister was briefed about the internal security situation in Jammu and Kashmir as well as in the rest of the country and the steps taken to ensure peace.
The meeting, attended by National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, Union Home Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi, chiefs of intelligence agencies and other senior officials, analysed the inputs, including on infiltration from across the border, received from various agencies and steps taken on them, official sources said.
While voicing concern over the killing of the eight CRPF men by militants in Pulwama on Saturday, Singh directed the officials to strengthen the security arrangement and intensify vigil across Jammu and Kashmir, the sources said.
The Home Minister has already set up a three-member team which will look into lapses, if any, in the Pulwama incident so that corrective steps could be taken. The team would also look into the possible increase of cross border infiltration and practices being followed during the movement of paramilitary forces convoy in Jammu and Kashmir.
Eight CRPF personnel were killed and at least 25 others injured when two militants attacked a CRPF convoy in Pulwama district on Saturday.
Convoy ambushes: 15 troops killed in last one year
New Delhi: Fifteen troops have been killed and over 60 injured in half-a-dozen militant attacks on convoys or road opening parties of central security forces in Jammu and Kashmir in the last one year.
As per a Home Ministry report, militants have attacked security forces with precision in the last one year. Despite launching only six such hits, they inflicted fatal injuries on 15 soldiers from BSF and CRPF while injuring 63 of them.
In all these cases, there was an element of surprise as the militants targeted the convoys that have remained vulnerable while they travel within the state, unleashing heavy fire from automatic weapons, it said.
The report also suggested that security agencies, as per an intelligence assessment, fear that attacks like the last week’s ambush of a CRPF convoy in the Valley could see an upward trend in the coming months.
A total of four terrorists were killed by the security forces as part of their retaliatory action after the strikes during the said period, the report said.
The Border Security Force lost two of its men when militants targeted their bus in Udhampur district in August last year followed by a similar assault on a CRPF contingent in Bijbehara where 5 personnel got injured.
The militants targeted a Central Reserve Police Force convoy at Pampore in February this year killing 2 men of the paramilitary and injuring eight others.
Similarly, on June 3, militants ambushed a BSF party in Bijbehara in Anantnag district when they were on a routine movement killing three troopers.
Nine BSF men were injured in this attack.
On June 13, a lone militant targeted a security force picket in Karal nullah area of Udhampur district. Prompt response from the CRPF troops neutralised him but not before he had killed three people including a civilian.
The last in the series was the attack on the CRPF bus in Pampore on June 25 where two terrorists killed eight personnel and injured 22.
Meanwhile, security forces have now decided to “tweak” their standard operating procedures in the wake of these incidents, with the CRPF declaring that they will provide an enhanced bullet-proof security cover to its men travelling in convoys.
The efforts include providing armour plates to vehicles, using mine protected vans after withdrawing them for anti-Naxal operations to other states and increasing the use of bullet-proof jackets by troops.
CRPF Director General K Durga Prasad had on Monday said the force will enhance vehicle checks in the Valley in coordination with JK police to identify terrorists travelling undercover, well in time.