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GpeL
June 12th, 2001, 01:38 PM
The unified command said the security forces will reserve the right to take military action as deemed appropriate to neutralise all such criminals who may have been using the religious places as a sheild.

Meanwhile, the All Party Hurriyat Conference has also requested the militants to spare the holy places.


My 2 cents.. why only on the ones takeing refuge in the mosques and religious places. The heat should be turned on anyone involved in such terrorist acts as killing innocent civilians and/or Army personal.

supada
June 12th, 2001, 01:43 PM
terrorist shd be dealt with appropriate military action without any political intervention...

Anyway political intervention is inevitable in India.....:mad: :mad:
if they don't interfere then who will feed them or fill their coffers

viking
June 12th, 2001, 02:04 PM
Death without trial for the terrorists from Pakistan in Kashmir and elsewhere is the only solution.

That is the only way fear can be instilled in the hearts of these war mongers.

Indian
June 12th, 2001, 02:11 PM
The Times of India News Service / PTI

SRINAGAR: All the six militants belonging to the Lashkar-e-Taiba, who were holed up in a mosque in Shangas in Anantnag district were killed by the security forces in a 40-hour operation that ended Tuesday morning.

A commando was killed and three security personnel were injured during the operation, according to inspector-general of police A K Bhan.

According to a PTI report from Delhi, the green signal for the National Security Guards to storm the mosque was given by Home Minister L K Advani, a move seen by observers as a stern warning to militants against misusing religious places.

The commandos entered the mosque through a wall damaged during the gun-battle, carrying highly sophisticated equipment, including night vision devices.

The security forces had cordoned off some areas of Shangas village Sunday evening after receiving information about the presence of some militants. In the fighting that ensued, the militants escaped and took shelter in the Jamia Masjid, a small mosque on the periphery of the village, Bhan said.

The troops then laid siege to the mosque cutting off power and food in an attempt to tire out the militants.

On Monday, three militants were killed by snipers positioned outside the mosque. Two more were killed when they were trying to escape from the masjid on Monday night. Eventually, when a small posse of security personnel entered the mosque, they discovered the bodies of six militants, four inside the masjid and two outside it.

A militant, who had surrendered, was shot dead by the holed-up militants on Sunday.

The IG said the security forces received full cooperation from the villagers who wanted the militants to be dealt with sternly. The masjid was slightly damaged during the crossfire, the IG said.

Four of the militants killed during the operation were identified as Abdul Ali Sofi of Hafizabad, Pakistan, Abdul Razaq of Muzafarabad, Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (a Lashkar 'divisional commander'), Muzafar Ahmad of Kokarnag, Anantnag, and Imtiyaz Ahmad of Mattan, Anantnag.

Some arms and ammunition, including six AK-56 rifles, 22 magazines, wireless sets, three grenades, 300 rounds of bullets and Rs 2,500 in cash were seized after the encounter.

Meanwhile, 13 people, including three security personnel and nine militants, one of them a member of a suicide squad of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, have been killed since Monday night. Two CRPF personnel, including an inspector, and a member of a Lashkar suicide squad were killed and three policemen were injured on Monday night when militants attacked a police camp in Shopian in Pulwama district. A militant forced his entry into the SOG camp and threw grenades.

Militants attacked the houses of two ruling National Conference leaders in the state, while security forces arrested three militants during the period
http://www.timesofindia.com/today/13home1.htm

GpeL
June 12th, 2001, 02:25 PM
Mr. K.P.S Gill says..

Terrorism isn’t going to go away on its own. It can, be contained within ‘acceptable’ limits (if such a term can ever be applied to an act of terrorism) but only if controlling and resisting it becomes ‘a way of life’ for each one of us. Only if we, as a nation, realise and accept that a price has to be paid to fight this scourge; that this price, from time to time, may include a sacrifice, not only on the part of nameless and faceless jawans and officers directly confronting the scourge and from their families but from us as well; and that this sacrifice may sometimes be as terrible as the lives of our own children.

The problem with our actions in the past is that we are not taken seriously-and have given no reason for others to take us seriously. We have been begging the international community to impose sanctions and declare Pakistan a ‘terrorist state’. But what have we done? Have we convicted and hanged a single terrorist in Kashmir? Have we suspended trade, or the Samjhauta Express, or even that ludicrous bus to Lahore? Have we formally declared Pakistan a terrorist state and imposed sanctions? Why should the US or Europe do so when we will not?

Fighting terrorism needs a clear mandate that lets our forces to do what’s necessary to crush-and I use the word advisedly-this monster. To create this mandate and to translate it into action on the ground will require radical institutional changes, including legislation, a reform of our senseless judicial and bureaucratic processes and institutions and of the security forces.

In the long run, the greatest weapon for peace is the idea. This is the strength and weakness of Islamic fundamentalists. Their vision of Islam may be a complete perversion of the teachings of the Prophet but gives the ignorant masses something to believe in. But theirs is not the only version of Islam. It is my abiding belief that Islam is nowhere as safe today as it is in India.If we can communicate to the world-even to our enemies-that India’s pluralistic democracy is the greatest guardian not only of Islam but of all faiths, we’d create the germ of the ideas that would defeat the fundamentalists.

Special message to chirag and party..


If, however, we choose the other ideological path, if we seek to fight their fundamentalism with our fundamentalism, we would destroy not only the Indian nation-state but just as surely the great and evolving civilisational idea that is India.

viking
June 12th, 2001, 02:42 PM
GPeL said:
If, however, we choose the other ideological path, if we seek to fight their fundamentalism with our fundamentalism, we would destroy not only the Indian nation-state but just as surely the great and evolving civilisational idea that is India.

In principle what K.P.S Gill said is right India has stood tall on the pedestal of morality for long,but unfortunately this has always been perceived to be India's weakness by her enemies.It's time that we dealt a lethal blow to all those harbouring sinister ambitions towards India.Tolerance has got us only suffering.
It's time we changed and give Pakistan a taste of it's own medicine.We should be able to talk from a position of strength.
We should not appear pleading for peace as though it's only necessary for India. :smash:

GpeL
June 12th, 2001, 02:43 PM
You are right but it is just a forceful military response to their mischief that is required not animosity towards the muslim folks in india.. that was the special message.. no one is saying to shake hands with pak.