Pahalgam terror attack: Houses razed, hundreds detained in massive crackdown in Kashmir
Authorities in Kashmir have launched a massive crackdown on terrorists and their sympathisers in the aftermath of the Pahalgam terror attack, razing homes of the ultras, raiding their safe havens and detaining hundreds of overground workers for questioning, officials said on Saturday (April 26, 2025).
The security forces are going after the known terrorist associates and their sympathisers across the length and breadth of the Valley, with an aim to create a deterrent against any Pahalgam-like attacks, the officials said. Terrorists on Tuesday opened fire in Baisaran, a popular tourist spot in the upper reaches of Pahalgam in Anantnag district, killing 26 people, mostly tourists.
Pahalgam terror attack: April 26, 2025
Houses of five terrorists or their associates have been demolished in the past 48 hours with officials saying similar action will be taken against others involved in terror activities.
Mysterious blasts blew up the houses of two active terrorists — Aadil Thoker in the Bijbehara area of Anantnag district and Asif Sheikh in the Tral area of Pulwama district.
While Thoker has been named as one of the three terrorists involved in the gruesome killing of tourists in Pahalgam, Sheikh's involvement in the attack has also not been ruled out, officials said.
The blasts took place after security forces raided the houses on Thursday night, they added.
The security forces have also rounded up hundreds of overground workers (OWGs) and their supporters — mostly in four south Kashmir districts — in their bid to track down the terrorists who carried out the attack on Tuesday.
One alleged OWG was killed in firing by terrorists during one such operation in Bandipora district on Friday, officials said.
Altaf Lalli was killed when security forces took him to a terrorist hideout in the Kulnar area of Bandipora district after he pointed out the location of the ultras.
Two policemen were also injured in the firing by the terrorists, who managed to escape, the officials said.
On Saturday, the action shifted to Srinagar where raids were carried out at more than a dozen places, including Safakadal, Soura, Pandach Bemina, Shalteng, Lal Bazar and Zadibal areas, they said.
In Anantnag district, search operations are being carried out round-the-clock as security forces step up vigilance.
Mobile vehicle check-points have been put up across the district to monitor any suspicious movement, the officials said.

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India Gazette
17 hours ago
- India Gazette
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Indian Express
2 days ago
- Indian Express
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During a visit by The Indian Express, multiple residential societies were found at the site. An entry into what was likely the centre of the lake leads to a cow shed complete with a cattle trough. A puddle caused by unseasonal rain was the only sign of water in the area. Brahmani Talavadi, which used to be located on Corporate Road in Makarba, has also completely vanished. In its place stands an entire gated society containing type E and type D government quarters built by the revenue department. AMC and Collectorate officials, both, declined to comment on these cases. A water body marked as Vejalpur lake does not even have the sloped identifiers required on the banks. It is simply a rectangular plot of land with two-third portion housing an unofficial parking space by local residents, a dumpsite for construction debris, and a feeding zone for pigeons. The remaining portion is a walled-off area containing an office and a telecom tower bearing the marking of public sector company BSNL. 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'While 27 lakes have been handed over, plots of 82 of them are being measured and will be transferred after this process. AMC's request for 33 lakes is still under due consideration.' Besides turning larger water bodies into lakefronts on the lines of Vastrapur and Kankaria in Ahmedabad, there has been a push to use the 'blue cover' in the city to mitigate floods and direct the rain water to recharge them. This is expected to also counter the Urban Heat Island (UHI) Effect – a phenomenon when certain pockets within a city experience higher heat load than surrounding or neighbouring areas on the same day. For this, the AMC has been working on the lake-interlinking project that uses hydrology, land gradient and gravity to interconnect clusters of lakes in the same area to accommodate stormwater as well as reservoirs that can be filled using Sewage Treatment Plants (STPs). Currently, there are seven sets of lakes that are already interlinked or where work in this direction is underway. Mirant Parikh, the Deputy Municipal Commissioner (DyMC) for Water and Drainage Projects at the AMC, said, 'We are planning interlinking in groups of lakes located next to each other. So, what happens is that water will go into the lakes through STPs but if one lake gets full, water can flow into other lakes.' Parikh said that in the other lakes, pre-monsoon work was underway to ensure that they accommodate more water. 'In small lakes, we will implement cost-effective development models and make catch pits to divert rain water into them so that the flooding issue is resolved during monsoon. We will also increase their water carrying capacity by deepening them – a process that is underway,' Parikh added. With the handover of Chandola Lake to the AMC imminent, the planning to turn it into a 'city attraction' is already underway. The first plan, said officials, is to finish clearing all the debris. Until a few weeks ago, the area was home to thousands of people, some of whom claimed they had been staying there for generations. As a result, so much is the volume of remnants of their homes that AMC has invited anyone seeking to salvage scrap, wood or other material to freely do so in the hope that it will reduce the burden for the civic body. At the same time, work is on to deepen the lake bed as well as construct a boundary wall with a platform and fencing through which visitors could view the lake. Now the question: Where will the water come from? Officials said there are three viable ways to bring water to Chandola. One is from the Kharicut canal, the other is from an STP in Bapunagar. The third is a proposal to construct a new STP on the banks of Chandola. But a major shift that the lake premises will likely go through entails changing the geography of the area. Chandola Lake premises is made up of three water bodies — the greater Chandola and two smaller (Nana) lakes to its north and north east — all separated by a land barrier. This land barrier is where major parts of the encroachments had come up over the last three or four decades. Deputy Municipal Commissioner Riddhesh Raval told The Indian Express that the land barrier will be removed to unify all the three lakes to turn the entire four lakh square metres into a single water body. This, said Raval, is important because the water inlets from the STP near the Malek Saban Lake in Bapunagar and the water line connecting Kharicut canal are linked to one of the smaller Chandola lakes. If the barrier is not demolished, the water won't reach the greater lake, thus defeating the purpose of the project.


News18
2 days ago
- News18
‘Government Gave Freedom, Country Gave Strength': Army Chief Hails Op Sindoor's Success
Last Updated: Indian Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi hailed the army saying that the military destroyed nine terrorist hideouts without any civilian casualties. Indian Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi on Sunday hailed Operation Sindoor- India's military strikes targeting terrorist infrastructure in Pakistan in response to April 22's ghastly Pahalgam terror attack—saying that it was not just a military operation but was an expression of the nation's unity, resolve, and self-confidence. In his inaugural podcast with Ibex Tarana 88.4 FM, the first-of-its-kind Community Radio Station based in Jyotirmath in Uttarakhand, which General Dwivedi inaugurated, he said that the military operation was successful because of the two reasons: one the government gave the freedom and the public trusted the military, which inspired them. to carry out the strikes. He further hailed the army saying that the military destroyed nine terrorist hideouts without any civilian casualties which demonstrates that the Indian Army is not only powerful but also responsible. 'I am proud that the soldiers of the Indian Army completed this mission with discipline, restraint, and immense courage. This victory belongs to the entire nation. Operation Sindoor is a decisive response to terrorism," he said. General Upendra Dwivedi further remarked that whenever a mother or sister applies sindoor, she would remember the soldiers of the Indian Army. Operation Sindoor India launched 'precision strikes" under Operation Sindoor on nine terror targets in Pakistan and PoK following the Pahalgam terror attack that killed 26 civilians. The strikes killed over 100 terrorists including 10 family members of Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) chief Masood Azhar and four close aides. Targets included Jaish's Markaz Subhan Allah in Bahawalpur, Sarjal camp in Tehra Kalan, Markaz Abbas in Kotli, and the Syedna Bilal camp in Muzaffarabad. Lashkar's strongholds — Markaz Taiba in Murdike, Markaz Ahle Hadith in Barnala, and Shwawai Nalla camp in Muzaffarabad — were also hit. Hizbul Mujahideen's facilities at Makaz Raheel Shahid in Kotli and Mehmoona Joya in Sialkot were among those targeted. The strikes, carried out with surgical precision, mark one of the most significant cross-border counter-terror operations since Balakot. Why It Was Named 'Operation Sindoor'? The codename 'Operation Sindoor', under which India responded to the dastardly Pahalgam terror attack carried a message that was both emotionally resonant and symbolically heroic. Approved by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the name was chosen to symbolically reflect India's response to the Pahalgam attack, keeping in mind the widows of the terror attack. Himanshi Narwal from Haryana, Aishanya Dwivedi from Uttar Pradesh, Shital Kalathiya and Kajalben Parmar from Gujarat, Sohini Adhikari from Kolkata, Pragati Jagdale from Maharashtra, Sheela Ramachandran from Kerala, Jennifer Nathaniel from Madhya Pradesh and Jaya Mishra were the women whose husbands were killed by the terrorists in Pahalgam. It was Himanshi Narwal, married for just six days, kneeling beside the body of her husband, Navy officer Lieutenant Vinay Narwal, who became the face of the tragedy. Days later, Himanshi appeared paying tribute to her husband, but without the sindoor (vermillion) that shines on the forehead of married Hindu women. First Published: June 08, 2025, 20:17 IST