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India-Pakistan
Terrorist’s "blue diary" may change course of Uri case
2016-11-08
[The Hindu] The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is basing its investigation on a "blue diary" recovered from one of the three Lashkar-e-Taiba
...the Army of the Pure, an Ahl-e-Hadith terror organization founded by Hafiz Saeed. LeT masquerades behind the Jamaat-ud-Dawa facade within Pakistain and periodically blows things up and kills people in India. Despite the fact that it is banned, always an interesting concept in Pakistain, the organization remains an blatant tool and perhaps an arm of the ISI...
(LeT) bully boyz who were killed when they tried to storm an Army camp in Kupwara on October 6.

The diary could prove to be a vital piece of evidence as Sherlocks suspect the September 18 attack on the Army camp in Uri too was carried out by LeT operatives, though the Army was quick to name the Jaish-e-Mohammad
...literally Army of Mohammad, a Pak-based Deobandi terror group founded by Maulana Masood Azhar in 2000, after he split with the Harkat-ul-Mujaheddin. In 2002 the government of Pervez Musharraf banned the group, which changed its name to Khaddam ul-Islam and continued doing what it had been doing before without missing a beat...
barely hours after the attack.

The diary contains the name of a publication house near the residence of LeT founder Hafiz Saeed
...founder of Lashkar-e-Taiba and its false-mustache offshoot Jamaat-ud-Dawa. The United Nations declared the JuD a terrorist organization in 2008 and Hafiz Saeed a terrorist as its leader. Hafiz, JuD and LeT are wholly-owned subsidiaries of the Pak intel apparatus, so that amounted to squat...
at Muridke in Pakistain.

Muridke camp
A senior NIA official said, "The name of the publication house is not the only clue. The diary has other details as well linking the bully boyz to LeT and Hafiz Saeed. Several notes in Urdu suggest that the terrorist, who has identified himself as Faidullah in the diary, was living in the Muridke camp and had received training there."

The diary was recovered by an NIA team that took over the investigation on October 9.

A Home Ministry source said the local police and the Army did not properly search the bodies and vital evidence would have been lost had the bodies been disposed of. However,
a poor excuse is better than no excuse at all...
Baramulla SSP Imtiyaz Hussain denied the allegation.

The three bully boyz were part of a suicide squad and had booby-trapped their bodies with grenades, to inflict casualties on security forces.

During the Pathankot operation, one of the Jaish-e-Mohammad bully boyz had hidden a live grenade in one of the pouches of his jacket before he was killed. This led to the death of NSG commando E.K. Niranjan when he was retrieving the body.

Tell-tale signs
Three AK rifles, three under barrel grenade launchers, magazines, several rounds of bullets, four Icom radio sets, three GPS devices, three cellphones, dry fruits, medicines, a map and a matrix sheet found on the bully boyz had tell-tale imprints of the LeT, said an NIA official.

A vial containing some medicinal liquid was also found on the attackers with an Urdu sticker saying: "khoon rokne ke liye" (to stop bleeding). The official said the bully boyz had come for a long haul.
Posted by:Fred

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