Wednesday 30 January 2013

Rogue Pakistan Army and notorious intelligence agency - ISI rewarded terrorist who beheaded Indian soldier

Pakistan Army terrorists are not signatories of the Geneva convention?

Pakistani bounty hunters planning more beheadings for money.ISI headquarters in Aabpara,Islamabad gave orders for this operation.

 

Pakistani intelligence agency ISI (Inter-Services Intelligence) reportedly rewarded the terrorist, who beheaded Indian soldier Lance Naik Hemraj Singh during a border scuffle on January 8, with Rs 5 lakh.

According to the MI report, the beheading was done by one Anwar Khan, a local guide who runs a shop in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK), and he was also involved in the beheading of an Indian Army captain in 1996 in the same Mendhar area. Anwar, who was handed over the reward by Colonel Siddiqui of ISI, was part of a group led by Subedar Jabbar Khan of ISI. The attackers included members of ISI-backed jihadi terror outfits Lashkar and Jaish-e-Mohammad. The MI report said ISI masterminded the January 8 beheading of Hemraj and mutilation of Lance Naik Sudhakar Singh's body, and involved terrorists in the execution of the plot aimed at triggering unrest along the border.

The report said the beheading was pre-meditated, with an ISI officer leading the 15-member Border Action Team (BAT) which ambushed the Indian soldiers in Mendhar that day. A brigadier-rank ISI officer oversaw the attack.The ISI has several BATs for such operations along the LoC and Pakistani army was hand in glove with the intelligence agency in the operation.

According to the report, there was a meeting between senior ISI officers, important terrorist commanders and guides a few days before the attack at Rawalkote in PoK. The meeting was presided over by a brigadier level officer of ISI and included Colonel Siddiqui (of Rawalkote), Azad Khan (of Peshawar), Yousuf Khan alias Pathan (of Muzzafarabad) and Major Abbasi (of Tattapani).

$50 is a very less amount for planting mines

 $50 is a very less amount for planting mines

No comments:

Post a Comment