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India: Incidents and Statements involving
Lashkar-e- Toiba (LeT) : 2010
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Date
Incidents
April - 1 
The Security Forces on April 1 shot dead six top Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) militants, including five Pakistanis and a local, after an exchange of fire at Khabra forests near village Raa Bagla in the Taryath area of Rajouri District, reports Daily Excelsi
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The Security Forces on April 1 shot dead six top Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) militants, including five Pakistanis and a local, after an exchange of fire at Khabra forests near village Raa Bagla in the Taryath area of Rajouri District, reports Daily Excelsior. The slain local militant was identified as Mohammad Aslam alias Qasim, a resident of Thanol, Mahore in the Reasi District. Aslam had been deputed by the LeT outfit to receive the infiltrators and take them safely to Mahore. Recoveries made from the scene of encounter include six AK-47 rifles with 27 magazines and 787 rounds, four UBGL grenades, two HE grenades, 25 Chinese grenades, two satellite telephones with one card, two mobile telephones with two Pak SIM cards, INR 2.30 lakh cash in Indian currency in the denomination of 1000, four compass, three Global Positioning Systems (GPS), one MP3 player, four maps of routes, five I Com wireless sets, drugs, water bottles, 92 batteries and a number of Pakistan made eatables. With this killing, two major groups of militants, who had infiltrated into Indian Territory from Pallanwalla and Nowshera sectors during past fortnight, have almost been neutralised. “A couple of more militants could be there but most of them have been eliminated. Majority of the ultras were dreaded commanders of LeT outfit hailing from Pakistan,” official sources said. The militant groups were reportedly heading towards Gulabgarh and Mahore areas of Reasi District from where they were to be allotted to other areas. Sources said prior to killings, the militant in the night of March 31 went to the house of a Village Defence Committee (VDC) member Raj Kumar at Raa Bagla and asked for food. As the VDC member refused, the militants resorted to firing. The VDC members fired back forcing the militants to flee.
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April - 2 
Four more Pakistani militants of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and an Army trooper were killed in another encounter with Army and Police at Sadda Darkeri forests in the Kalakote area of Rajouri District during day long gun battle on April 2, reports Dail
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Four more Pakistani militants of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and an Army trooper were killed in another encounter with Army and Police at Sadda Darkeri forests in the Kalakote area of Rajouri District during day long gun battle on April 2, reports Daily Excelsior. During continued search operations in Kalakote and Dharamshal areas of Rajouri District, troops intercepted the militants at Sadda Darkeri forests and an exchange of fire ensued in which the four militants and the army trooper were killed. The slain militants were identified as Abu Mavia, Abu Zakir alias Chacha, Abu Hafiz and Abu Rana, all code names. All of them were Pakistani militants of the LeT outfit in the age group of 20 to 25 years. Recoveries made from the site of encounter include four AK rifles with 10 magazines and 250 rounds, two pistols, two Under Barrel Grenade Launchers (UBGLs), three satellite telephones, three Global Positioning Systems (GPS), 12 hand grenades, three I Com wireless sets, two matrix sheets, four maps and some eatables.
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April - 6 
A US Defence Department think tank warned that India’s transportation, economic infrastructure and political establishment are on the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s (LeT) radar, report Economic Times. It has also confirmed India’s charge that the militant outfit
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A US Defence Department think tank warned that India’s transportation, economic infrastructure and political establishment are on the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s (LeT) radar, report Economic Times. It has also confirmed India’s charge that the militant outfit still enjoys funding from Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). The think tank found the close links between LeT and Karachi-based D-Company of underworld gangster Dawood Ibrahim. “D-Company has established smuggling routes in the region, access to material, a partnership with LeT, and depends on ISI for refuge in Pakistan,” the report has said. The think tank associated with the US Army War College said that the LeT, though having a close relationship with al Qaeda, will continue to evolve into a distinctive South Asia-centric terrorist actor while still receiving aid from fringe elements in Pakistan’s security and intelligence apparatus and elsewhere. “This will not only allow LeT to continue to plan future Mumbai-style terrorist attacks in India from safe havens in Pakistan, but will also enable it to guide and assist the predominantly indigenous Indian Mujahideen (IM), ” According to the think tank, LeT collects donations from the overseas Pakistani community in the Persian Gulf and the UK, Islamic non-Governmental organisations, Pakistani/Kashmiri business people and through its parent organisation Jama'at-ud-Da'awa (JuD). The militant outfit also counts on donations from sympathetic Saudis, Kuwaitis, and Islamist-leaning ISI leaders. “In addition, LeT maintains relations with extremist and/ or terrorist groups across the globe ranging from the Philippines to the Middle East and Chechnya by means of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa [JuD] network,” the report said.
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April - 8 
An Army trooper was killed and another injured in a gun battle with militants holed up in the forest area of Handwara in the Kupwara District on April 8, reports Daily Excelsior. Acting on a tip off about presence of militants, Security Forces (SFs)
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An Army trooper was killed and another injured in a gun battle with militants holed up in the forest area of Handwara in the Kupwara District on April 8, reports Daily Excelsior. Acting on a tip off about presence of militants, Security Forces (SFs) launched a search operation in the forests of Kramhour-Rajwar in Handwara. During the operation the troops came under heavy firing from the militants in which two soldiers were injured. One of the injured soldiers later succumbed to injuries. Three to four militants of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), including the most wanted ‘commander’ of the outfit, Abdullah Uni, are believed to be holed up in the forest area. The militants were already operating in the hinterland of the Valley and were not infiltrators. However, intelligence sources said Uni, a Pakistani national, might have been on his way back to Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK). Uni is the top ranked LeT ‘commander’ in North Kashmir and has managed to escape the dragnet of SFs at least five times in the last five to six months. He is considered to be the brain behind all the major attacks on SFs and Police informers in Sopore and adjoining areas over the past couple of years.
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April - 8 
In another operation in the Magam area of the same District, the SFs arrested an OGW of the LeT, identified as Nazir Ahmad Mir, along with two hand grenades in the night of April 8.
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In another operation in the Magam area of the same District, the SFs arrested an OGW of the LeT, identified as Nazir Ahmad Mir, along with two hand grenades in the night of April 8.
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April - 9 
Security Forces (SFs) arrested three local trained militants of the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) and two Over Ground Workers (OGWs) of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) during separate operations in Kashmir valley, Daily Excelsior reported. On April 9, the SFs ar
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Security Forces (SFs) arrested three local trained militants of the Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) and two Over Ground Workers (OGWs) of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) during separate operations in Kashmir valley, Daily Excelsior reported. On April 9, the SFs arrested the three HM militants, identified as Bilal Ahmad Wani, Imran Ahmad Wani and Mohammad Ashraf Gojri, from the Batapora-Magam area of Handwara in the Kupwara District along with huge cache of arms and ammunition. While an AK rifle, two magazines, 60 rounds of ammunition and two UBGL grenades were recovered from the possession of Bilal, six UBGL grenades were recovered at the instance of Imran and Ashraf.
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April - 13 
A Delhi court has convicted a former Jammu and Kashmir Police Constable for being a cadre of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), PTI reported on April 13. Mushtaq Ahmed Wani, who was posted as guard at the residence of Fazal Hussain Beigh, brother of ex-Finan
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A Delhi court has convicted a former Jammu and Kashmir Police Constable for being a cadre of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), PTI reported on April 13. Mushtaq Ahmed Wani, who was posted as guard at the residence of Fazal Hussain Beigh, brother of ex-Finance Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Muzaffar Hussain Beigh, was arrested from a place near Red Fort in Delhi on November 25, 2006, by the Delhi police's Special Cell personnel. Wani, hailing from Baramulla District, was arrested along with INR 6 lakh alleged hawala money. It alleged the convict had come to the national capital to collect a consignment of arms, ammunition and hawala money which were to be used for terror activities in Jammu and Kashmir. The convict came into contact with his Pakistan-based handler Mohammad Ahmed, a ‘deputy commander’ of LeT, in September, 2006, and started working for the banned organisation at his instance. Additional Sessions Judge Dharmesh Sharma held Wani, 30, guilty of the various offences under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act. The court is likely to pronounce the quantum of sentence on April 19.
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April - 14 
Abdul Aleem, 28, suspected Lashkar-e-Toiba operative hailing from Maldives, was detained by Thiruvanathapuram city Police on April 14 following an input from the Intelligence Bureau, reported Express Buzz. There is a look-out-notice of the Interpol w
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Abdul Aleem, 28, suspected Lashkar-e-Toiba operative hailing from Maldives, was detained by Thiruvanathapuram city Police on April 14 following an input from the Intelligence Bureau, reported Express Buzz. There is a look-out-notice of the Interpol was pending against him. He would be deported to Male on April 15 since he was not involved in any cases India.
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April - 14 
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on April 14 refused to give any credence to Islamabad’s contention that further evidence was needed against terror group Lashkar-e-Toiba, which is responsible for the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attacks, reported Economic Tim
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Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on April 14 refused to give any credence to Islamabad’s contention that further evidence was needed against terror group Lashkar-e-Toiba, which is responsible for the 26/11 Mumbai terrorist attacks, reported Economic Times. “I think the American intelligence and the American forces have pointed out the role of Lashkar-e-Taiba and the link between Lashkar-e-Toiba and Al Qaeda... So, I do not see there is any need for me to provide any additional evidence to Prime Minister Gilani about the role of Lashkar-e-Toiba... Hafiz Saeed, Illyas Kashmiri, Zaki-ur-Rahman, are names with regard to fanning of terrorism directed against (India),” he said. He also said that India could resume the dialogue with Pakistan only after “concrete” and “effective” action against the perpetrators of the Mumbai terror strikes. The Hindu adds that Prime Minister Singh told a press conference in Washington that that people who were named as part of the conspirators in the Mumbai terrorist attacks “are roaming around freely” in Pakistan.
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April - 14 
Separately, Army and Police destroyed a Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) hideout at village Tandar in the Kishtwar District and recovered a large quantity of explosive devices and ration items on April 14. Recoveries include two UBGL launchers with 10 rounds, t
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Separately, Army and Police destroyed a Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) hideout at village Tandar in the Kishtwar District and recovered a large quantity of explosive devices and ration items on April 14. Recoveries include two UBGL launchers with 10 rounds, two Chinese grenades, two RPG rounds, one detonator, one AK rifle and a large quantity of ration, blankets, eatables and medicines. Police said the hideout belonged to slain LeT militant Dawood Ahmed.
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April - 16 
According to PTI, Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) continues to have close links with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and has used the terror group's services to foment anti-India passion in Kashmir and elsewhere, a UN report said on April 16. "The
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According to PTI, Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) continues to have close links with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and has used the terror group's services to foment anti-India passion in Kashmir and elsewhere, a UN report said on April 16. "The Pakistani military organised and supported the Taliban to take control of Afghanistan in 1996. Similar tactics were used in Kashmir against India after 1989," said the much-awaited report by UN-appointed independent panel to probe the killing of former Pakistan premier Benazir Bhutto.
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April - 16 
India has made it clear to Pakistan that although action against Hafiz Saeed, ‘chief’ of Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (JuD), over ground organisation of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), will help ease the strained atmosphere, it's not the only benchmark that will sat
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India has made it clear to Pakistan that although action against Hafiz Saeed, ‘chief’ of Jama’at-ud-Da’awa (JuD), over ground organisation of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), will help ease the strained atmosphere, it's not the only benchmark that will satisfy New Delhi before it can think of resuming talks, reports IANS. Action against Hafiz Saaed will be a useful indicator of Pakistan's willingness to do something about India's concerns over cross-border terror, informed sources said.
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April - 16 
Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) continues to have close links with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and has used the outfit's services to foment anti-India passion in Kashmir and elsewhere, a UN report said on April 16, reported NDTV.
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Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) continues to have close links with Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) and has used the outfit's services to foment anti-India passion in Kashmir and elsewhere, a UN report said on April 16, reported NDTV.
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April - 19 
A Delhi court on April 19 sentenced a former Jammu and Kashmir Police Constable to eight years rigorous imprisonment for being a cadre of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), reports PTI. Mushtaq Ahmed Wani, who was posted as guard as the residence of Fazal Hu
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A Delhi court on April 19 sentenced a former Jammu and Kashmir Police Constable to eight years rigorous imprisonment for being a cadre of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), reports PTI. Mushtaq Ahmed Wani, who was posted as guard as the residence of Fazal Hussain Beigh, brother of ex-Finance Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Muzaffar Hussain Beigh, was arrested from the Red Fort in New Delhi on November 25, 2006, by personnel of the Delhi Police's Special Cell. Besides the prison term, Additional Sessions Judge Dharmesh Sharma, who pronounced the quantum of punishment, also imposed a fine of INR 50,000 on Wani (30), holding him guilty of various offences under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). The court had held Wani guilty in the case on April 13.
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April - 19 
The United States is working at the “highest level” to provide India with access to Lashker-e-Toiba (LeT) operative David Headley, even as it is sharing “real-time” information with India, U.S. Ambassador Timothy J. Roemer said on April 19, reported
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The United States is working at the “highest level” to provide India with access to Lashker-e-Toiba (LeT) operative David Headley, even as it is sharing “real-time” information with India, U.S. Ambassador Timothy J. Roemer said on April 19, reported The Hindu.
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April - 19 
A link between the Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF) and Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) has once again surfaced with the infiltration of two militants, including a Pakistani and a local of Doda in Jammu and Kashmir, from Bamial sector of Gurdaspur District in Pu
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A link between the Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF) and Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) has once again surfaced with the infiltration of two militants, including a Pakistani and a local of Doda in Jammu and Kashmir, from Bamial sector of Gurdaspur District in Punjab on April 19, as reported earlier, according to Daily Times. The militants had surfaced at Chabe Chak in Rajbagh area on April 19 and after a brief contact with Police remained untraced since then. Reports said three suspected guides, who had the history of assisting infiltrators, have gone under ground after the Police operation between Chabe Chak to Billawar forests. A possibility is being explored whether these guides had helped the militants. Official sources said that intrusion of the militants from forward village of Simbal Skole in Bamial sector of Gurdaspur District in Punjab was facilitated by KZF cadre across the International Border (IB) in Pakistan. This has been corroborated by enough on spot evidence as well as messages intercepted on both sides—Gurdaspur and Kathua by the Security Forces (SFs). Reports indicate that a couple of KZF militants might also have infiltrated into Punjab from Bamial sector but the reports have not been corroborated by the security agencies so far. However, a number of KZF literature (Dashmesh Regiment) was recovered by SFs from the border area from where the intrusion took place in the morning of April 19. Recovery of ‘Dashmesh Regiment’, a part of KZF outfit, and literature from the border from where the LeT militants had infiltrated has confirmed that a nexus between the two militant outfits still existed. A close co-ordination between KZF and LeT existed a long back too. However, after the militancy died down in Punjab, the KZF and LeT links were confined to Pakistan. Sources said the intercepts as well as circumstantial evidence have confirmed that it was the KZF network opposite Gurdaspur District in Punjab which had helped the LeT cadre to infiltrate into this side as the militants were finding it difficult to breach fencing in Jammu sector despite making a series of attempts to do so during past few months. Except for Pallanwalla from where a big group of ultras succeeded in infiltration on the intervening night of March 26 and 27, most of other intrusion bids by the militants have been foiled. The LeT leadership, according to sources, is understood to have taken the help of their KZF associates in Pakistan to push the militants into this side as they were running extreme shortage of cadre especially in the wake of killing of almost all 17 militants, who were pushed to this side from Pallanwalla and Nowshera, during encounters with the Army and Police.
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April - 19 April - 20
Police recovered a large quantity of Pakistani items including fresh eatables from a bag seized from Chabe Chak Nursery where two militants had taken shelter in the night of April 19. The militants reportedly have managed to escape into a nearby area
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Police recovered a large quantity of Pakistani items including fresh eatables from a bag seized from Chabe Chak Nursery where two militants had taken shelter in the night of April 19. The militants reportedly have managed to escape into a nearby area in the morning of April 20 in the Rajbagh area of Kathua District. Both the militants, whom intercept revealed as Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) cadre, hadn’t been able to cross Ujh and were believed to be hiding in downtown of the river. As reportedly earlier, the militants had infiltrated in the morning of April 19 from village Simbal Skole in the Bamial area of Gurdaspur District in Punjab and took route of forward villages to reach Chabe Chak where they were spotted at 7pm on April 19.
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April - 20 
Militants in Jammu and Kashmir are recruiting more and more women, a secret Police document accessed by Daily News & Analysis has shown. “Each village has a substantial number of women Over Ground Workers (OWGs) who are being used to deliver money, w
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Militants in Jammu and Kashmir are recruiting more and more women, a secret Police document accessed by Daily News & Analysis has shown. “Each village has a substantial number of women Over Ground Workers (OWGs) who are being used to deliver money, weapons or information to terrorists,” the report says. Recruiting women has its advantages, according to the report, which says, “Getting women convicted under preventive detention is a distant dream. For example, one woman was caught transferring terrorist money and grenades but was let off on bail after Sopore witnessed law and order problems.” Society, too, doesn’t look kindly on women being held for terrorist activities. Also, the militants have started using upgraded technology. They are using voice overlapped internet protocol (VOIP) and encrypted messages. “Terrorists have switched to different methods of communication, including VOIP calls, which are difficult to track,” the six-page document reveals, adding, “All messages sent and received are matrix-based and take a lot of time to decipher. By the time they are decoded, their importance is lost.” The report further said that in the past six months, more than 20 Security Force (SF) personnel and 15 militants were killed in Sopore in various militancy-related incidents. The high casualty among SFs is attributed to a new strategy developed by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) chief Uni, who has been able to bring together several outfits. In 2010, Sopore has seen more than eight militant attacks on Policemen and security installations. Most of them have been carried out by a module comprising LeT, Harkat-ul-Mujahideen (HuM) and HM, all headed by Uni. Pakistani national Uni had replaced Furqan, LeT’s Kashmir chief, who returned to his home country a few years ago. Uni was earlier operating from Lolaab and Bandipora areas, but has now started operating from Sopore.
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April - 21 
The Jammu and Kashmir Police on April 21 arrested Mohammad Ahsan Antoo, the head of the little-known body called Human Rights Forum, hours before he was to organise a conference to be tele-addressed by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Muhammad
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The Jammu and Kashmir Police on April 21 arrested Mohammad Ahsan Antoo, the head of the little-known body called Human Rights Forum, hours before he was to organise a conference to be tele-addressed by the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, Jaish-e-Muhammad (JeM) chief Masood Azhar and HM chief Syed Salahuddin, according to Indian Express. Besides Antoo, the Police also arrested four other separatist leaders including Javid Mir, Mukhtar Ahmad Sofi, Sheikh Zahoor Ahmad and Haji Farooq Ahmad Wani. They were heading towards the local hotel, where the meet was to be held, when the Police took them into custody. “We had reports that they are going to play a taped message of Hafiz Mohammad Syed. Then Jaish’s Masood Azhar and Hizb-ul-Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin were also going to address this gathering through phone. We investigated the matter and once we found out that it was not a seminar, but a separatist meeting, we had to act,” Inspector General of Police Farooq Ahmad told Indian Express.
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April - 21 
West Bengal Governor and former National Security Adviser (NSA) M. K. Narayanan on April 21 said that the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) has "proven links" with the Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), reports The Hindu. He was speaking at a seminar
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West Bengal Governor and former National Security Adviser (NSA) M. K. Narayanan on April 21 said that the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) has "proven links" with the Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), reports The Hindu. He was speaking at a seminar on terrorism organised by the Mumbai Police. "The LeT is linked to the ISI; these links are well-proven. There is a specified section of the ISI to oversee covert operations of the LeT, which has networks in 21 countries, including Australia, North America, Europe and Asia," said Narayanan. The involvement of American LeT operative David Headley and Canadian national Tahawwur Rana in terror plots had thrown light on the LeT's deep pool of recruits and the use of modern communication equipment in the November 26, 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks showed the level of sophistication in the outfit, he mentioned.
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April - 22 
Asserting that Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) is a threat not only to India and America but also to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, P. J. Crowley said counter-terrorism is the central pillar of US' strategic dialogue
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Asserting that Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) is a threat not only to India and America but also to Afghanistan and Pakistan, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, P. J. Crowley said counter-terrorism is the central pillar of US' strategic dialogues with all these countries, reports PTI. "It (LeT) is a threat to our citizens. It's a threat to Indian citizens. Next door, it's a threat to Pakistani citizens. And next door, it's a threat to Afghan citizens," Crowley said. "We have stepped up our cooperation with all of these countries. Together we are trying to reduce threat of violent extremism that threatens all of us and our respective citizens. It is a work in progress," he said when asked about the threat posed by the LeT.
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April - 25 
DNA reports that a suspected LeT cadre, identified as Ghulam Qadir Mir, was arrested by the SFs along with four grenades and 22 rounds of AK ammunition in the Kupwara District.
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DNA reports that a suspected LeT cadre, identified as Ghulam Qadir Mir, was arrested by the SFs along with four grenades and 22 rounds of AK ammunition in the Kupwara District.
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April - 25 
Two militants of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), including a Pakistani, were shot dead by Punjab Police in the morning of April 25 at village Rattarwaha in Gurdaspur District, bordering Kathua District in Jammu and Kashmir, reports Daily Excelsior. Two Pu
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Two militants of the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT), including a Pakistani, were shot dead by Punjab Police in the morning of April 25 at village Rattarwaha in Gurdaspur District, bordering Kathua District in Jammu and Kashmir, reports Daily Excelsior. Two Punjab Police personnel were killed and four others injured in the operation. Recoveries made from their possession include two AK-47 rifles, two pistols, six Chinese grenades, 16 AK and pistol magazines, all loaded, four IEDs, one compass, packets of detol soap and some other belongings. As reported earlier the militants in the morning of April 19 had infiltrated into Indian side from Bamial sector on the International Border in Gurdaspur sector after Pakistan Rangers had blasted fencing in 400 meters area by firing rockets and forced their way into Chabe Chak nursery in the Rajbagh area of Kathua. The militants, who kept on shuffling between border villages of Kathua and Gurdaspur Districts, were unable to breach Police cordon of both States to cross Jammu-Pathankot national highway to reach Udhampur or Doda Districts and were held up on this side for more than a week. Unconfirmed reports said that some Punjab militants had also intruded along with the Lashkar militants as literature of ‘Dashmesh Regiment’ of Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF) was recovered from the site of intrusion. Bamial sector in Gurdaspur has Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir and Pakistan on its three sides, adds Daily News & Analysis (DNA).
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April - 25 
Two top LeT militants, identified as Ans and Maaz, both Pakistanis, once again managed to give a slip to Security Forces (SFs) and Police during an encounter at village Khatasoo in the Gandoh area of Doda District in the morning of April 25, accordin
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Two top LeT militants, identified as Ans and Maaz, both Pakistanis, once again managed to give a slip to Security Forces (SFs) and Police during an encounter at village Khatasoo in the Gandoh area of Doda District in the morning of April 25, according to Daily Excelsior. An Army trooper was injured in the operation.
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April - 26 
Pakistan has contended that the Indian evidence against Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Muhammad Saeed of his involvement in November 26, 2008 (also known as 26/11) Mumbai terrorist attack is not admissible under their laws for prosecution, repo
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Pakistan has contended that the Indian evidence against Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) founder Hafiz Muhammad Saeed of his involvement in November 26, 2008 (also known as 26/11) Mumbai terrorist attack is not admissible under their laws for prosecution, reports Times of India. In a dossier given to India in which it asked for handing over of Mohammed Ajmal Amir Kasab, Islamabad has also asked New Delhi to give all additional evidence related to 26/11 to it by the middle of next month, sources said. In the dossier given by Pakistan in response to the three dossiers given by India, Islamabad said whatever evidence India has given was not credible and not enough to prosecute anyone in a Pakistani court, sources said. Pakistan said Indian evidence against Saeed and others, accused in the involvement of 26/11 Mumbai attack, was mainly based on the statement of Kasab, the lone arrested terrorist in 26/11, and it was not admissible under Pakistani law. Pakistan has termed India's claims about involvement of a Pakistan Army Major and dreaded terrorist Ilyas Kashmiri as nothing but "figment of imagination". The Pakistani response was handed over by Foreign Office officials to Indian Deputy High Commissioner Rahul Kulshreshth in Islamabad on April 26.
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April - 27 
Pakistan-based militant outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) is making concerted efforts to carry out attacks in India and to develop links in Maldives and other neighbours, the Minister of State for Home Affairs Ajay Maken told Lok Sabha (Lower House of Par
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Pakistan-based militant outfit Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) is making concerted efforts to carry out attacks in India and to develop links in Maldives and other neighbours, the Minister of State for Home Affairs Ajay Maken told Lok Sabha (Lower House of Parliament) on April 27, reports Times of India. "Available inputs indicate that Pakistan-based terrorist groups primarily the Lashkar-e-Toiba are making concerted efforts to organise terrorist attacks in various parts of the country, inter-alia, including iconic institutions, prominent industrial installations and tourist locations among others," Ajay Maken told Lok Sabha in a written reply. The Minister also said some of the prominent groups which pose a serious threat include LeT, Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM), Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM), Harkat-ul-Jehad-al-Islami (HuJI), Harkat-ul Mujahideen (HuM), Al Badr, Babbar Khalsa International (BKI), Khalistan Zindabad Force (KZF), Khalistan Commando Force (KCF), International Sikh Youth Federation (ISYF), United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and Communist Party of India –Maoist (CPI-Maoist). "There is also another organisation, the Indian Mujahideen," the Minister informed. Maken said, "The Government continues to be alert to these threats and re-calibrates its measures to combat terrorism by way of reviewing threat perception and a number of important decisions and measures have been taken. Further, he said "Government has constituted National Investigation Agency (NIA).The Multi-Agency centre has been strengthened and reorganised to enable it to function on 24x7 basis for real time collection and sharing of intelligence with other intelligence and security agencies."
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April - 29 
India and Pakistan agreed on April 29 to the resumption of high-level dialogue, which has been disrupted since the Mumbai terror attacks of November 26, 2008 (also known as 26/11), reports The Hindu. Meeting on the sidelines of the South Asian Associ
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India and Pakistan agreed on April 29 to the resumption of high-level dialogue, which has been disrupted since the Mumbai terror attacks of November 26, 2008 (also known as 26/11), reports The Hindu. Meeting on the sidelines of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) summit, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Pakistani counterpart, Yusuf Raza Gilani, decided to ask their Foreign Ministers and Foreign Secretaries to first discuss the modalities of restoring trust and confidence in bilateral ties. That would pave the way for talks on “all issues of mutual concern,'' Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao said in Thimphu. India's concern on terrorism came up for detailed discussion with the Prime Minister conveying to Gilani that public opinion in India was exercised about the “terror machine'' that operates from Pakistan and this was the only aspect holding back normalisation of relations. Manmohan Singh touched on all aspects of concern to India such as the Pakistan-based terrorist infrastructure, increase in infiltration and the slow progress in prosecuting the perpetrators of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks. Singh also spoke of India's “deep and continuing concern'' about the failure to prosecute Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) founder Muhammad Hafiz Saeed. Pakistan said there were some difficulties in the judicial system to deal with Hafiz Saeed. Gilani assured Singh that Pakistan was serious about prosecuting the perpetrators of the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks and maintained that all efforts were being made to bring the trial to a speedy conclusion.
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