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Top Lashkar terrorist behind 3 big attacks in India killed in Pakistan

Top Lashkar terrorist behind 3 big attacks in India killed in Pakistan

India Today18-05-2025

A top Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) operative, Saifullah Khalid, accused of orchestrating several high-profile terror attacks in India, has been killed in Pakistan's Sindh province, sources told India Today TV on Sunday. He was attacked by some unknown assailants.Khalid was a key conspirator in three major attacks: the 2005 Indian Science Congress (ISC) attack in Bangalore, the 2006 attack on the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) headquarters in Nagpur and the 2008 CRPF camp assault in Rampur.advertisementThese attacks, carried out over a span of three years, claimed several lives and marked a massive escalation in LeT's operations on Indian soil.
Operating under the alias 'Vinode Kumar,' Khalid was based in Nepal for several years, where he lived under a false identity and married a local woman, Nagma Banu.From Nepal, he is believed to have coordinated activities for LeT, maintaining a low profile while playing a crucial role in recruitment and logistics.More recently, Khalid had shifted his base to Matli in the Badin district of Sindh province in Pakistan. There, he continued working for Lashkar-e-Taiba, a UN-proscribed Pakistani terrorist group and its front organisation Jamaat-ud-Dawa, primarily focusing on recruitment and fund collection for terror operations.Last week, three more Lashkar terrorists, including 'Operations Commander' Shahid Kuttay, were killed in an encounter with security forces in south Kashmir's Shopian district.advertisementKuttay, and the other two, Adnan Shafi, a resident of the Vanduna Melhura area of Shopian, and Ahsan ul Haq Sheikh, a resident of Murran area of the neighbouring Pulwama district, were killed in the Shukroo Keller area. Two AK series rifles, a large quantity of ammunition, grenades, and other war-like stores were found in their possession.Kuttay, who was the Operations Commander of LeT in south Kashmir, promoted terrorist recruitment in Kashmir, also misled many young men and killed many innocent people, an official told news agency PTI.

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Hindustan Times

time20 minutes ago

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Will go ahead with Siang dam only after public nod, says Arunachal CM amid protests

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Two Indian peacekeepers honoured posthumously for sacrifice in line of duty on International Peacekeepers Day

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'Can't rule out strategic miscalculation': Pakistani general warns of escalation risk despite India-Pak troop drawdown
'Can't rule out strategic miscalculation': Pakistani general warns of escalation risk despite India-Pak troop drawdown

First Post

time25 minutes ago

  • First Post

'Can't rule out strategic miscalculation': Pakistani general warns of escalation risk despite India-Pak troop drawdown

Despite signs of de-escalation along the India-Pakistan border, with both sides beginning to reduce troops after their worst clashes in decades, a top Pakistani military general has warned that the risk of future escalation remains high read more General Sahir Shamshad Mirza, Pakistan's chairman of the joint chiefs of staff committee, speaks during an interview with Reuters on the sidelines of the IISS Shangri-La Dialogue security summit, in Singapore, May 30, 2025, in this screengrab from a video. Reuters Despite signs of de-escalation along the India-Pakistan border, with both sides beginning to reduce troops after their worst clashes in decades, a top Pakistani military general has warned that the risk of future escalation remains high. General Sahir Shamshad Mirza, who is in Singapore to attend the Shangri-La Dialogue forum, said while there was no move towards nuclear weapons during the conflict, it was a dangerous situation. 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Prime Minister Narendra Modi warned Pakistan this month that New Delhi would target 'terrorist hideouts' across the border again if there were new attacks on India. India and Pakistan have fought three major wars, two of them over Kashmir, and have been involved in numerous armed skirmishes over the decades. New Delhi holds Islamabad responsible for terrorism in Kashmir that began in 1989 and has claimed tens of thousands of lives. Pakistan, however, insists it offers only moral, political, and diplomatic support to Kashmiris seeking self-determination. 'This (conflict) lowers the threshold between two countries who are contiguous nuclear powers…in the future, it will not be restricted to the disputed territory. It would come down to (the) whole of India and (the) whole of Pakistan,' Reuters quoted Mirza as saying. 'This is a very dangerous trend,' he added. 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