South Asia Terrorism Portal
JMB: Serial Crackdown S. Binodkumar Singh Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management
On October 8, 2016, in an anti-terrorism crackdown, 12 Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) terrorists were killed in Gazipur, Tangail and Dhaka Districts. Seven of them were killed in the Harinal area in Gazipur City under ‘Operation Spate 8’ conducted jointly by the Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit, Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) team and Gazipur Police. Police recovered three small arms and locally-made sharp weapons from the site. Two others were killed during an operation by the Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) at a JMB den in the Lebubagan area of Gazipur District. One AK 22 rifle, bomb making materials, one laptop, a locally-made sharp weapon and some bullets were recovered. In another raid carried out by RAB, two terrorists were killed in a three-storey building in the Mirzamath area of Tangail town. One pistol, one revolver, 11 sharp weapons, 12 bullets, two laptops and BDT 64,362 were recovered from the ground floor of the flat. Separately, in Dhaka District, Nazmul Haque aka Abdur Rahman, the financier of JMB died after he jumped from his flat on the fourth floor to flee during a raid by RAB in Savar upazila (sub-District). RAB recovered a firearm, ammunition, sharp weapons, a mobile jammer and a huge number of Jihadi books from his flat.
On September 11, 2016, one JMB terrorist was killed and three were injured during a Police raid at a house in the Lalbagh area of capital Dhaka. During the raid, five Policemen were also injured as the terrorists attacked them with sharp weapons.
On September 2, 2016, Murad aka Jahangir Alam aka Omar aka Major Shaheb, the JMB ‘military commander’, was killed during a raid in Dhaka city's Mirpur area. Before being shot dead, Murad stabbed three Policemen trying to capture him.
On August 29, 2016, Khaled Hasan aka Badar Mama (30), the ‘military commander’ of the northern region of JMB, and Ripon aka Golam Tareque aka Abu Ibrahim (29), the ‘chief of Ansar Rajshahi’, a JMB splinter group, were killed in a gunfight with the Police in Bogra District. Two constables Babul Akhtar and Abdul Mottalleb suffered injuries in the incident. A foreign-made pistol, four bullets, two homemade bombs, bomb-making materials and a knife were recovered from the spot.
On August 27, 2016, three JMB terrorists including, Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury, the ‘mastermind’ of the Gulshan (Holey Artisan bakery) attack and two close aides were killed in a Police raid on a JMB den in the Paikpara area under Narayanganj District. Police recovered an AK-22 rifle, one pistol, several magazines and four live grenades. Chowdhury was the purported ‘amir’ of the Islamic State (Daesh) in Bangladesh.
According to partial data collected by the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP), since the July 1, 2016, Gulshan attack, a total of 41 JMB terrorists have been killed and another 80 have been arrested across Bangladesh in different raids (data till October 16, 2016). Prominent among those killed were: ‘financier’ Nazmul Haque; ‘military commander’ of the northern region, Khaled Hasan; Tamim Ahmed Chowdhury, allegedly responsible for the Gulshan attack; and ‘military commander’ Murad.
JMB was founded in 1998 by Sheikh Abdur Rahman, with the objective of establishing Islamic rule in Bangladesh and to replace the current State and Constitution. It opposes the existing political system and seeks to "build a society based on the Islamic model laid out in Holy Quran-Hadith." It opposes democracy, socialism as well as cultural functions, cinema halls, shrines and NGOs. The Government did not realize the gravity of JMB’s agenda until the terror group triggered countrywide serial bombings on August 17, 2005. 459 low intensity explosions occurred in 63 of Bangladesh's 64 Districts (excluding Munshiganj, where the bombs failed to explode) killing three and injuring more than 100 people.
In the crackdown that followed after the synchronized bomb explosions, according to the Police, a total of 160 cases were filed across the country and1,157 JMB leaders and cadres were indicted. Of the accused, 960 terrorists were arrested. Two top leaders of the group, Sheikh Abdur Rahman and Sidiqul Islam aka Bangla Bhai, were executed on March 30, 2007. That was the end of the first phase of JMB.
Before that crackdown, JMB was led by a seven-member Majlis-e-Shura, comprising its top leadership, including Abdur Rahman and Bangla Bhai. The group had 16 ‘regional commanders’ and 64 ‘district heads’, besides hundreds of ‘operational commanders’. The cadre was organized in three tiers. Eashar (key members), comprising 200 full time members, which reported directly to the Central Committee; Gayeri Easher (mid-level members), with an estimated 10,000 members; and the Sathis or Sudhis (companions), consisting of younger foot soldiers (cadre strength unknown). For operational requirements, the group divided the country into nine ‘divisions’– one each in Khulna, Barisal, Sylhet and Chittagong; and two each in Dhaka and Rajshahi. The JMB also had a suicide squad called the Shahid Nasirullah Arafat Brigade. The members had an ‘insurance policy’ from the group.
The JMB took only nine years to reorganize. This time, the born-again terrorist outfit, referred to as Neo-JMB by law enforcers, is far more radicalized. The Neo-JMB now claims affiliation to Daesh (Islamic State, IS) and its ideology, is relatively skilled in modern technology and equipped with firearms, and is capable of causing greater damage than the old JMB which, a decade ago, carried out suicide bombings and synchronized blasts across the country. Re-emerged in 2014, Neo-JMB drew the attention of law enforcers only after committing the Bangladesh Commerce Bank Limited (BCBL) robbery in Ashulia, a suburban area near Dhaka city, on April 21,2015, an incident in which eight persons were killed. Neo JMB was also responsible for the July 1, 2016, Gulshan attack in which 20 hostages, including 17 foreigners, was killed. The armed attack launched near the historic Sholakia Eidgah on the July 7, 2016, leading to the death of two Policemen, a housewife and a terrorist, was also attributed to the Neo-JMB.
Significantly, on December 14, 2015, India’s National Investigation Agency (NIA) warned, "They (JMB) hatched a conspiracy wherein the main purpose was to establish Sharia Law in Bangladesh by toppling the democratically elected government and to spread tentacles in India for the furtherance of their goal. "Confirming the reality of the threat, on July 17, 2016, Bangladesh Information Minister Hasanul Haq Inu observed, “Even today, the JMB is plotting to kill her (Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed). But, people are with us. Our Prime Minister has worked hard to upgrade the Bangladesh Army. We are also getting support from the Indian Government. We finished most of those based in Bangladesh. Some are still in our jails, waiting for conviction. But a good number of leaders are abroad, including in Pakistan and the Middle East. We have also alerted many European countries regarding this.”
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who has consolidated Bangladesh’s secular commitments reining inthe Islamist extremist groups, stated, during a visit to Dhakeshwari National Temple in Dhaka city on October 8, 2016, “Our Government has always taken stern action against terrorism and militancy and would continue to curb the twin demons with an iron hand.... There would be no place for terrorism and militancy on Bangladesh's soil.” Earlier, on September 3, 2016, asking the terrorists and their leaders to surrender in response to the Government’s call, or to face dire consequence, Bangladesh Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan warned, “If you do not give yourself up to the law enforcement agencies, you will face what your accomplices have experienced in the immediate past operations.”
The re-surfaced Neo-JMB mainly consists of tech-savvy youngsters, a fact that as surprised Bangladesh’s security forces, who are finding it difficult to detect their motives and future plans. Despite the fact that Bangladesh’s law enforcement agencies have neutralized a number of hardcore JMB terrorists, significant risks persists, as the terrorist group continues to attract fresh recruits, as evidenced by the fact that, in the recent encounters, several of the terrorists killed and arrested had allegedly joined the group very recently. The weapons and resources recovered during the recent raids also suggest that there are significant flows of resources to the group, and it is imperative that these sources of assistance be identified and neutralized, if the group is to be finally neutralized.
Odisha: Maoist Spike Deepak Kumar Nayak Research Assistant, Institute for Conflict Management
On October 5, 2016, cadres of the Communist Party of India-Maoist (CPI-Maoist) shot dead a villager and severely injured another at an unspecified location in the Malkangiri District. The duo was abducted by the Maoists on October 3 from Jantri village under the Andrapalli panchayat (village level local self-government institution) of the District.
On October 2, 2016, the dead body, with its throat slit, of a villager, identified as Budara Khilamali, was found at Katapali village under Maithili Police Station in Malkangiri District. Handwritten Maoist posters were recovered from the spot. According to reports, Maoists had taken Budara away in the night of October 1 to attend a Sabha (meeting).
On September 15, 2016, a woman cadre of the CPI-Maoist was reportedly killed in an encounter with the Police in the Niyamgiri Forest under the Lanjigarh Police Station in Kalahandi District. Police recovered one INSAS (Indian Small Arms System) rifle, one SLR (Self-Loading Rifle) and two other rifles from the encounter site.
According to partial data collated by the South Asia Terrorism Portal (SATP), at least 33 persons, including 19 civilians, two Security Force (SF) personnel, and 12 Maoists have already been killed in Odisha in Maoist-linked violence in the current year, till October 16, 2016; by comparison, 26 persons, including 13 civilians, four SF personnel and nine Maoists, were killed over the same period in 2015. The number of fatalities through 2015 totalled 33 (18civilians, four SF personnel and 11 Maoists).
Year
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
Total
The spike in Maoist related fatalities in 2016 reverses the declining trend that had been established since 2010.Maoist-related fatalities in Odisha had risen continuously between 2005 and 2010, with an aberration in 2009, but had started falling since, due to several factors. In October 2015, the Maoists had acknowledged that their Odisha unit had suffered huge losses following Sabyasachi Panda’s parting of ways. The Maoists also had admitted that the surrender on October 28, 2014, of Nachika Linga, the head of the Chasi Mulia Adivasi Sangha (CMAS), a Maoist front organization that had spearheaded the mass movement of 2006-09, impacted particularly adversely on the prospects of the organisation in the State.
Apart from the fatalities registered, the Maoists have also been involved in 20 exchange of fire incidents in the State in the current year (data till October 16), in comparison to 10 exchanges of fire in the corresponding period of 2015. The Maoists also engineered four explosions in 2016, in comparison to five explosions for the same period in 2015; and eight incidents of arson in 2016, as against four in 2015.The Maoists have also given bandh (general shutdown) call on four occasions, as against two in 2015.
Meanwhile, in an effort to increase their cadre strength, the Maoists have sought to force villagers to come to their meetings. In one such incident on October 7, 2016, about 25 armed Maoists organised a 20-minute-long meeting of youth on the village road at Bhurukundi village under the Purunakot Police limits in the Satkosia wildlife sanctuary of Angul District, exhorting them to join their cadre. They offered to pay them a ‘monthly salary’ of INR 10,000 each. It was reported that about 40 young men and women participated in the meeting out of fear, as the Maoists had threatened to blow up the village if the youth did not join their organisation. The Maoists retreated into the dense forests after the meeting. Sources revealed that the Maoists had held a similar meeting in the same village on October 4, 2016. No further detail is available about both these incidents.
It is evident from the recent spurt in the incidents of killing and other Maoist-activities in the State that an attempt is being to reclaim lost ground in the State. Between 2010 and 2012, fatalities were reported from at least 11 Districts, out of Odisha’s 30 Districts. In 2014, such reports were received from just five Districts. This went up to seven in 2015. So far, in 2016, fatalities have already been reported from eight Districts.
Significantly, Director General of Police (DGP) Kanwar Brajesh Singh disclosed on September 18, 2016, that the State Police was formulating strategies to counter the Maoists’ efforts to revive their bases in Odisha:“With the recent seizure of huge cache of arms and ammunitions and studying their movement and modus operandi, it is now apparent that the Red Rebels are trying their best to strengthen their base in the state…especially trying to regain their foothold in remote areas from Pottangi in Koraput District to Sundargarh District.”
Further, on September 26, 2016, Rahul Dev Sharma, Superintendent of Police (SP), Visakha Rural, in the adjacent Visakhapatnam District of Andhra Pradesh, reiterated that the Maoists were active in the Galikonda area of Visakhapatnam District as well as in the cut-off areas in Visakhapatnam region, and were trying to regroup in the Andhra Odisha Border (AOB) region, including parts of Odisha.
The current surge of LWE-activities in Odisha can be attributed to the establishment of new ‘division’–the Odisha-Srikakulam Division –by the CPI-Maoists in the AOB region, to regain their hold in the Gunupur and Gudari Forest areas of Rayagada District, as well as the Srikakulam region in Andhra Pradesh.
A white paper published by the State Home Department on May 10, 2016, revealed that, while significant improvement was seen in Maoist situation in Jajpur, Dhenkanal, Gajapati, Ganjam, Nabarangpur, Keonjhar, Mayurbhanj, Sambalpur, Deogarh, Sundargarh and Nayagarh Districts during 2015, the situation in certain parts of Malkangiri, Koraput, Nuapada, Bolangir, Rayagada, Kandhamal, Baragarh and Kalahandi Districts remained challenging.
17 battalions of Central Armed Police Forces – eight battalions each of the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) and Border Security Force (BSF) and one battalion of the Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA), a specialized unit of the CRPF, are presently deployed in Odisha. The Central Forces are largely located in Koraput, Rayagada, Malkangiri, Kalahandi, Keonjhar, Mayurbhanj, Nuapada and Kandhamal Districts. In an attempt to strengthen the security grid further Odisha Chief Secretary Aditya Prasad Padhi stated on June 21, 2016, that the Government would ask for two more battalions of Central Forces to tackle the LWEs in the State. No further information is available in this regard.
The CAPFs add to the State Police. However, the strength of the State Forces is quite abysmal. According to the Bureau of Police Research and Development (BPR&D) 2015 data, police-population ration in the State stood at 119.61 in 2015 (as on January 1, 2015) as compared to the national average of 138.92. Vacancies at the leadership level in the Police, i.e. at the Indian Police Service (IPS) level, stand at 79, against 188 sanctioned IPS posts. Past experience has shown that, while normalcy can be attained in any insurgency affected area with the help of Central Forces, it can only be sustained by improving the strength and quality of the State Police. In 2004, the Odisha Government formed Special Operation Group (SOG), a specialised anti-Maoist force trained in anti-insurgency operations. According to media reports, SOG has scored major successes against Maoists in the southern Odisha Districts. The Force, which had a reported strength of 563 personnel in the beginning, now has over 2,200 personnel.
Despite loses, the Maoists have demonstrated enormous resilience and capacities for recovery in the past. Unless the Police and administrative machinery of the State is enormously improved, a consolidation of the present gains against the Maoists are likely to prove ephemeral.
Civilians
Security Force Personnel
Terrorists/Insurgents
BANGLADESH
Islamist Terrorism
INDIA
Jammu and Kashmir
Left-Wing Extremism
Chhattisgarh
Total (INDIA)
PAKISTAN
Balochistan
FATA
Punjab
Sindh
Total (PAKISTAN)