LG orders dismissal of 2 Govt employees over terror links
STATE TIMES NEWS
SRINAGAR: Lieutenant Governor Manoj Sinha on Friday terminated the services of two government employees in the Union Territory of Jammu and Kashmir over their alleged involvement in terror activities, officials said.
The sacked employees were identified as Siyad Ahmad Khan, an Assistant Stockman in the Sheep Husbandry Department, son of Mohd Afzal Khan, resident of Keran, District Kupwara, and Khurshid Ahmad Rather, a school teacher, son of Mohd Yousaf Rather, resident of Nawa Gabra, Karnah, Kupwara both in north Kashmir’s Kupwara district.
Article 311 (2)(c) of the Constitution was invoked to terminate their services after investigations by security and intelligence agencies established their involvement, they said. Both of them are currently lodged in the Kupwara district jail.
According to officials, Rather is accused of working as an Overground Worker (OGW) for the Lashkar-e-Taiba.
A probe revealed that Rather, who was appointed under the Rehbar-e-Taleem scheme in 2003 and confirmed in 2008, allegedly procured and distributed arms and narcotics for Pakistan-based handlers. He was arrested earlier this year after arms were seized in Kupwara.
He was tasked by Pakistan-based handlers to procure and distribute arms, ammunition and narcotics among active terrorists in the Valley. He reportedly received several consignments through the LoC in Karnah. The weapons were supplied to terrorists, while proceeds from narcotics sales were used to fund operations, they said.
His role surfaced after intelligence inputs on January 25, 2024, indicated that two Pakistani terrorists, with the help of four associates, including Rather, were smuggling arms in Kupwara.
Khan, appointed in 2004, was caught with an AK-47 and is accused of sheltering and infiltrating terrorists and smuggling arms.
Investigators revealed that he was in touch with a Pakistan-based handler, who used him for smuggling arms and narcotics across the LoC for further distribution to active LeT terrorists.
Officials described their actions as “betrayal of national trust”, underscoring the administration’s zero-tolerance policy against terror support networks within government ranks.
They said the Lieutenant Governor was satisfied after considering the facts and circumstances of the cases and noted that, on the basis of the information available, the activities of the two are such as to warrant their dismissal from service.