Press Trust of india

2018 was deadliest for govt forces in a decade in Kashmir

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Srinagar, Jan 03:  Government forces killed some top militant commanders including Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Naveed Jatt and also 260 militants in 2018, but nearly 100 soldiers were also killed during the year.

The number of militants killed in 2018 was around 260 which is higher than 2017 and the highest in a single year in the last eight years, officials said.

In 2010, as many as 270 militants were killed in action by government forces in Jammu and Kashmir. The number reduced to 119 in 2011. Then in 2012, 84 militants were killed, 100 in 2013, 110 (2014), 113 (2015), 165 (2016) and 218 last year, the officials said.

They said the higher number of militant casualties in 2018 was because of “pinpoint intelligence and meticulous operations by the security agencies”.

However, the year gone by was one of the bloodiest for the government forces as they suffered the highest number of fatalities than in any other year in the past decade.

Last year, 95 forces’ personnel were killed, while 83 personnel were killed in 2017, the officials said.

The number of civilians killed in violence has also been higher in the year gone by. As many as 86 civilians were killed in militancy-related violence – whether in actions by militants or in cross-firing between the militants and the government forces or in government forces’ action on protestors during clashes.

The year also saw a unilateral ‘ceasefire’ announced by the Centre in terms of non-initiation of combat operations during the fasting month of Ramazan in May-June. While mainstream political parties and the people, by and large, welcomed the move, the militants rejected the ceasefire.

The ceasefire, however, was not extended beyond the month of Ramazan even as it had brought respite to the people.

Violence in 2018 started early when on January 06, four policemen were killed and two others were injured in an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) blast set off by militants in Sopore town in Baramulla district of north Kashmir.

The number of militant fatalities in a single month in 2018 was highest in November when 40 militants were killed by the government forces.

In the second half of the year – in the four months of August, September, October and November – the government forces went on an overdrive, killing 130 militants, including several top commanders of various outfits.

Earlier in the year, on May 06, government forces killed Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) commander Saddam Padder along with four other militants, including an assistant professor from Kashmir University Mohammad Rafi Bhat, in an encounter in Badigam village in Shopian district.

Bhat’s life as a militant lasted less than 36 hours after he had gone missing on May 04 and had joined the Hizb.

While the militancy-related violence continued in Kashmir throughout the year, it took an ugly turn on June 14 when senior journalist and Editor-in-Chief of ‘Rising Kashmir’ daily newspaper, Shujaat Bukhari, and his two personal security officers were shot dead by unidentified gunmen outside his office at Press Enclave here.

Police said Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) was involved in the journalist’s killing and its Pakistani commander Naveed Jatt executed the plan.

Jatt, who had escaped from police custody at SMHS Hospital here on February 06 when he was being shifted from the Central Jail, Srinagar, for treatment, was later killed in an encounter with government forces on November 28.

On October 11, Hizb suffered another setback when its top commander Manaan Bashir Wani was killed along with his associate in a gunfight with government forces in north Kashmir’s Handwara.

Outstanding in studies, 27-year-old Wani, who quit PhD studies in Allied Geology to join the militant ranks in January earlier in the year, had his basic education in Jawahar Navodya Vidyalay and Sainik School Manasbal. He was considered to be chief recruiter for militants in north Kashmir area following killing of some of the top militants in the region over the past two years.

Less than a week after Wani’s killing, LeT’s top commander and one of the oldest surviving militants, Mehraj-ud-Din Bangroo, was killed in a gunfight in Srinagar’s Fateh Kadal locality on 17 October.

The militants also targeted government forces throughout the year and continued with decamping with the weapons. The militants also intensified attacks on alleged informers, abducting and killing several of them and on many instances, released the videos of their execution.

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