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Tuesday, November 11, 2008

[mukto-mona] Media Reports on Assam Blasts: The Slanderous Slant

[The news items reproduced below bring out a very
interesting and revealing pattern. A pattern defined
by deliberate lying and motivated and malicious
misinformation campaign.

On the very next day of the lethal blasts, one Vijay
Thakur screams: "Deadly cocktail, say intelligence
agencies"! He unabashedly claims: "Intelligence
agencies have concluded that it was not HuJI alone but
other Bangladesh-based terror outfits such as Islamic
Chatra Sangh and Jamait-e-Islami that joined hands
with Ulfa in planning and executing yesterday's deadly
serial blasts in Assam." But no, no clue whatever, how
did/could the (numerous) intelligence agencies collate
all the relevant info, analyse those, exchange notes
and come to the conclusion just in a day! Nor any clue
why so stunningly efficient intelligence agencies so
appallingly failed in stopping these blasts from
happening. Nor does he tell us how he became privy to
such info, which should have been treated as highly
confidential at that earliest stage of investigations.

Similarly, another Samudra Gupta Kashyap claims, the
very next morning, quoting the police that Guwahati
was on jehadi priority list for long. But in stark
contrast with Vijay Thakur he also tells us that the
police "do not have any definite and immediate clues
about the involvement of HuJI". But never mind. The
"main suspicion is on the jehadi elements", because
"you never know"! So in order to know, or at least
claim, that the HuJI is behind the blasts you don't
really have to know. That too in a region where a
number of terorist organisations are operating who
have carried out innumerable blasts causing
large-scale bloodshed. And these perpetrators did not
incidentally include the HuJI.

The NDTV now, however, informs that after about ten
days 6 people have been arrested out of which one is a
Police Constable Chandra Bodo.

Praveen Swami, in a refreshing contrast, makes a
systematic analysis of the available and concludes
that "Assam terror bombing trail leads to NDFB ". He
further informs: "No evidence of Harkat
ul-Jihad-e-Islami role in attacks". He also draws our
attention to: "Police say a text message sent to a
local television station, claiming responsibility for
the bombings on behalf of the until-then unknown
Islamist group called the Islamic Security
Force-Indian Mujahideen, turned out to be a hoax."

Latest news reports, carried by the Statesman, Asian
Age and Indian Express broadly echo the hypothesis
that "at least three militant outfits, including
outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom, National
Democratic Front of Bodoland and Karbi Longri National
Liberation Front" collaborated to carry out the
blasts. However, while the PTI/Statesman lists the
HuJI as one of the suspects, the Asian Age denies.

Quite interestingly, Samudra Gupta Kashyap, on the
very same day files two divergent stories. In one, he
says, the "security forces seem to be convinced of the
role of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland
(NDFB)". In the other, he tells us something quite
different. A "senior Army officer, who holds over-all
charge of counter-insurgency and counter-terror
operations in the lower Assam region, has said there
are reasons to believe that there was a foreign hand
in the serial blasts that occurred in Guwahati and
three other towns on October 30." He adds: "The most
important reason is that the ULFA or any other local
outfit does not have the expertise to carry out such a
massive attack" said Major General Chander Praksh, GOC
of the Army's 21 Division, with headquarters at
Rangiya. We have no idea whether the Major General is
authorised to float such theories in public, when
civilian intelligence agencies are entrusted with the
investigations, which is evidently having serious
negative implications as regards India's relationship
with a neighboring country. Are these journos and
Major Generals accountable to anyone?

Sukla]

II.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/assam-blasts-may-be-linked-to-bodo-group/383920/


Assam blasts may be linked to Bodo group

Samudra Gupta Kashyap Posted: Nov 11, 2008 at 0013

Guwahati, November 10 : Twelve days after the serial
blasts in Guwahati and three other towns in Assam,
security forces seem to be convinced of the role of
the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) —
currently in ceasefire with the Government.

Officials in the police and Army, apart from Chief
Minister Tarun Gogoi and the Centre are agreed that
the conspiracy to carry out the blasts was hatched and
remote-controlled from Bangladesh with local groups
like the NDFB and ULFA helping.

The Strategy Group of the Unified Command Structure,
which met here on Monday, endorsed action against NDFB
cadres violating ceasefire ground rules, following
which security personnel positioned themselves close
to four designated camps where the NDFB cadres are
holed up. Sources revealed that the Strategy Group
took strong note of the ceasefire ground rules
violation.

"Iinstructions were issued tonight to the respective
SPs in the districts to ensure that there was no
further violation of these rules," sources told The
Indian Express on late Monday night.

II.

Foreign hand in Assam blast: Army

[That's the caption of a report filed by the same
reporter with same dateline, i.e. Guwahati, November
10, as appearing on the page 8 (top right hand corner)
of the same paper, Mumbai (print) edition.

The first paragraph is reproduced below.]

BARELY a couple of days after Chief Minister Tarun
Gogoi said that Bangladesh-based groups were involved
in the recent serial blasts in Assam, a senior Army
officer, who holds over-all charge of
counter-insurgency and counter-terror operations in
the lower Assam region, has said there are reasons to
believe that there was a foreign hand in the serial
blasts that occurred in Guwahati and three other towns
on October 30.

III.

http://www.hinduonnet.com/2008/11/10/stories/2008111056031200.htm

Assam terror bombing trail leads to NDFB

Praveen Swami


No evidence of Harkat ul-Jihad-e-Islami role in
attacks


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Two of three cars used as bombs were purchased by the
NDFB cadre

NDFB founder-chief Rajan Daimary issued the order for
the operation


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NEW DELHI: Evidence has emerged that a hit-team of the
National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) executed
the October 30 serial bombings in Assam — evidence
which undermines earlier claims that the
Bangladesh-based Harkat ul-Jihad-Islami (HuJI) was
responsible for the murderous attacks.

Seventy-seven people were killed in the bombings.

Assam Police investigators have determined that two of
the three Maruti 800 cars used as bombs were purchased
by the NDFB cadre less than six weeks before the
attacks. Based on the interrogation of suspects linked
to the fabrication of the car-bombs, investigators now
believe that orders to initiate the operation were
issued by NDFB founder-chief Rajan Daimary in
September.

Daimary, who is believed to shuttle between Bangkok,
Manila and Singapore, is believed to have authorised
the attacks to signal frustration at the lack of
progress in talks between the NDFB and the government
of India.

In May this year, NDFB leaders had released a charter
of demands for talks with the Union government. No
progress was made in talks, though, because of fears
that concessions to the NDFB could complicate efforts
to bring about a separate dialogue with the United
Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA).

While senior NDFB leaders like Govinda Basumtary
continued to support the ceasefire — a controversial
agreement has allowed organisation's cadre to conduct
extortion and kidnapping operations with impunity
—Daimary overruled them and ordered a large-scale,
demonstrative attack.

Lethal past

Daimary has a long history of sanctioning brutal
attacks against civilians. In October, 2004, at least
12 people were killed in attacks on targets that
included crowded markets in the towns of Dhekiajhuli,
Gouripur and Bijni.

Formed in October 1986, the NDFB — until 1994 known as
the Bodo Security Force — seeks a sovereign state
north of the Brahmaputra river.

Following offensive operations by Bhutan's military in
December 2003, the organisation suffered serious
reverses. Its key ideologue, B. Irakdao, was reported
missing following the operations. Bhutan also handed
over the head of the NDFB's central headquarters,
Udang K.R. Brahma, to India in June 2004. Nileswar
Baswumatary, who handled the NDFB's finances
surrendered to the Assam Police in March 2004, while
the terror group's deputy commander, Bijoy Boro, was
deported from Bangkok later that year.

Police sources said that the ULFA appeared to have
provided infrastructural support to the operation, in
the form of explosives and logistical aid. "While the
NDFB was assigned last-mile responsibility for the
operation," a senior Assam Police officer said, "it
seems that ULFA did much of the back-office work".

Like Daimary, ULFA's Bangladesh-based chief Paresh
Baruah has been seeking means to demonstrate his
organisation's reach and lethality.

In recent years, ULFA's military capabilities have
been severely degraded, with the decimation of the
organisation's 28 Battalion in sustained
counter-terrorism operations. Leaders of two of the 28
Battalion's three companies, Alpha and Charlie, were
seeking to bring about a ceasefire along with
pro-dialogue elements in ULFA's still-potent 709 and
27 Battalions—an effort, police believe, that Baruah
hoped to scuttle by co-sponsoring the serial bombings.

Some in India's intelligence services believe the NDFB
executed the bombings on behalf of Islamists in
Bangladesh.

On Saturday, Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi appeared
to endorse that perception, describing Bangladesh as
"our biggest threat." "Assam is the most vulnerable
State", Mr. Gogoi said, "in regard to terror attacks
from Bangladeshi soil. It is the main problem as a
large number of terrorist groups there help our local
outfits."

Speculation that HuJI may have been responsible for
the bombings was built, in part, on signs that the
Islamist terror group was planning attacks to
retaliate against recent anti-Muslim violence in
Assam. In September, the Army had shot dead seven
suspected HuJI operatives in a shootout near Boraibari
village, 30 km from the India-Bangladesh border in
Assam's Dhubri district.

However, no hard evidence has so far emerged to
support the proposition that either the NDFB or ULFA
acted on behalf of Islamist terror groups such as
HuJI, or Islamists within Bangladesh's external covert
service, the Directorate-General of Field
Intelligence.

Police say a text message sent to a local television
station, claiming responsibility for the bombings on
behalf of the until-then unknown Islamist group called
the Islamic Security Force-Indian Mujahideen, turned
out to be a hoax.

IV.

http://209.85.175.104/search?q=cache:l6DeiVT5VXcJ:www.asianage.com/presentation/leftnavigation/news/india/%E2%80%983-militant-groups-behind-assam-blasts%E2%80%99.aspx

'3 militant groups behind Assam blasts'

BY MANOJ ANAND

GUWAHATI Nov. 9: The special investigation team of the
home ministry has found evidence against at least
three militant outfits, including outlawed United
Liberation Front of Asom, National Democratic Front of
Bodoland and Karbi Longri National Liberation Front on
their involvement in the serial bomb blasts in Assam.

Authoritative sources in the home ministry however
told this newspaper that they have not been able to
find any clue on involvement of Bangladesh-based HuJI
in the Assam serial blasts so far.

In fact, the Assam police was suspecting the
involvement of jehadi elements in the serial blasts
which home ministry is yet to believe.

About the investigation, security sources said that
they have got certain crucial lead after the arrest of
hardcore Ulfa leader Dhiren Bora who was caught with a
consignment of 9 kg of TNT and RDX.

In his confession, Mr Bora admitted to have supplied a
large consignment of explosives to the Ulfa rebels on
October 26 which is suspected to have been used in the
serial bomb blasts of October 30.

The explosives were arranged and supplied to the Ulfa
rebels by outlawed Karbi Longri National Liberation
Front rebels.

The security agencies are of view that the Karbi
Longri National Liberation Front is being patronised
and groomed by Ulfa.

There have been instances of KLNLF rebels taking order
from top Ulfa rebels, security sources said adding
that they have also reached to the conclusion that one
of the cars used in the serial blasts was arranged and
supplied by Thungri Boro whose association with
outlawed NDFB has also been established.

The security sources said that the evidence in
possession of the security agencies point finger
towards the involvement of these three rebel groups in
October 30 blasts.

"We are not ignoring the jehadi angle in our
investigation but so far there is no evidence," said
the sources adding that SMS in the name of Indian
Mujahideen was sent with the motive to divert the
attention from the real culprit.

Meanwhile, some more people have been detained by the
police and central security agencies for having
provided logistical support as also helping procure
the cars used in the serial blasts that left over 84
people dead and more than 400 injured in the state.

The security sources said that some of the technical
know-how used in triggering off the blasts with RDX
and TNT in Assam was available with a few separatist
groups only in the states of Assam and Jammu and
Kashmir.

The outlawed Ulfa rebels were found to have been using
this expertise in past also.

V.

http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080072018&ch=11/10/2008%201:34:00%20PM


Assam blasts: Six arrests made so far

NDTV Correspondent
Monday, November 10, 2008 (New Delhi)

Six people have been arrested so far in connection
with the Assam serial blasts that killed at least 61
people and injured over 200 people.

Police Constable Chandra Bodo is also arrested in
connection with serial the blasts.

These 12 blasts are one of the most powerful blast
that rocked Guwahati.

There were six near-simultaneous blasts in Guwahati at
about 11:30 am on Thursday in crowded market places
--Ganeshguri, Pan Bazaar Fancy bazaar and the District
Court complex.

VI.

http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=2&theme=&usrsess=1&id=230396

'Ulfa-NDFB behind blasts'

Press Trust of India
New Delhi, Nov 9: More than a week after serial blasts
rocked Assam, investigators have found clues that Ulfa
and NDFB carried out the deadly explosions with the
help of Bangladesh-based HuJI's expertise.
Home ministry sources said the investigators have
found enough evidence that the banned Ulfa had carried
out the 30 October serial blasts with the help of
dominant Bodo militant group NDFB.
This comes in the wake of the Centre expressing
concern over the "paradigm shift" in the northeast
militancy.
Some people have been detained by police and Central
security agencies who had provided logistical support
including procuring cars used in the blasts that left
over 80 people dead and more than 400 injured, the
sources said.
The people have an allegiance with the two banned
outfits, the sources said.
Interestingly, NDFB is currently under truce with the
security forces and is engaged with the government in
peace negotiations. "We have found that the
Bangladesh-based HuJI has provided the expertise to
Ulfa and NDFB as none of them has the technology to
explode such devastating bombs which claimed more than
80 lives," a home ministry official said. Home
ministry sources said the government is worried over
the fact that the northeast militants has started
using a deadly mixture of RDX, ammonium nitrate and
plasticised explosives to carry out explosions which
led to greater casualties which was never seen in the
past.

VII.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/pokdhaka-intercept-talked-of-action-in-assam-focus-on-ulfalashkarhuji-role/379583/

PoK-Dhaka intercept talked of action in Assam: focus
on ULFA-Lashkar-HuJI role
Pranab Dhal Samanta Posted online: Oct 31, 2008 at
0111 hrs
New Delhi, October 30 : While the United Liberation
Front of Assam (ULFA) sought to deny its involvement
in today's devastating serial blasts across the state,
security agencies strongly suspect that ULFA cadres
are involved in what they assess as an operation
masterminded by the Lashkar-e-Toiba and the
Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HuJI) in Bangladesh.
Reinforcing this is the fact that RDX was used in
today's blasts and barely a couple of days ago,
security agencies obtained an intercept of a
conversation allegedly between Muzaffarabad in PoK and
operatives in Bangladesh where there is a reference to
Assam and a clear intent that "something should be
done".

While this input is still being worked upon, alerts
were sent out accordingly.

The intercept, sources said, was in line with other
recent inputs confirming the presence of ULFA cadres
in Lashkar training-camps near Muzaffarabad. ULFA also
has similar links with HuJI in Bangladesh which is
again closely linked with Lashkar. Intelligence
agencies have also confirmed that in April 2008, a
batch of ULFA cadres were sent to HuJI camps in
Bangladesh for advance training after completing their
basic course in their own camps here.

Indian agencies have been increasingly getting
evidence on the ULFA-LeT-HUJI link after the
interrogation of one Faisal Naeem by Bangladesh
authorities. Sources said Naeem was sent from Pakistan
as the Lashkar in-charge in Bangladesh but was picked
up by authorities there in September 2006.

In his interrogation, he is said to have revealed that
he was in touch with top ULFA leaders and their
cadres. He even claimed to have met them to organize
better training so as to "build up their capacities"
in facing Indian security forces in Assam.
Subsequently, under intense pressure from Pakistan,
authorities in Dhaka deported Naeem back to Pakistan
though his interrogation details were shared with
India.

However, today's blasts seem to have shaken the top
leaders of ULFA with intelligence inputs surfacing
within an hour of the explosions that Paresh Baruah
was trying to get in touch with his aides in Assam to
deny any ULFA role.

VIII.

http://www.indianexpress.com/news/after-assam-blasts-congratulations-from-bangladesh-to-planner-in-ag.../383608/

After Assam blasts, congratulations from Bangladesh to
'planner' in Agartala
Pranab Dhal Samanta Posted online: Nov 10, 2008 at
1112 hrs

New Delhi, November 9 : A congratulatory message from
Bangladesh, intercepted a day after the serial blasts
in Assam, holds the key to the investigation into the
bombings. The intercept suggests the main planner was
in Agartala and adds to evidence against the
Harkat-ul-Jehad-al-Islami, which New Delhi will soon
take up with Dhaka.
Security agencies picked up the conversation from a
mobile phone number somewhere in Bangladesh to the
suspected mastermind in Agartala on October 31: "Papa
bada khush hua, ab apne agle muqaam par chale jao
(Father is very happy, you now move to your next
destination)".

Over 70 people were killed in nine blasts in five
cities including Guwahati in Assam on October 30.

The intercept was made by communications intelligence
units on the Indo-Bangla border. Security agencies,
working with the local police to locate the person to
whom the call was made, have made significant headway
in the past few days, sources said, but are unwilling
to reveal details because they hope to take up the
matter with Bangladesh and continue the probe on that
end.

Sources said investigators were not ruling out a link
between the Assam bombings and the serial blasts in
Agartala on October 1. Security agencies are certain
both attacks were planned in Bangladesh, with the
involvement of some cadres of militant outfits in the
North-East, and backing of bigger groups like HuJI.

Indian agencies had identified a recent trend of
estranged cadres of groups like the United Liberation
Front of Assam (ULFA) being trained and used as
footsoldiers by HuJI and even the Lashkar-e-Toiba to
gain better access to the North-East. As reported by
The Indian Express earlier, security agencies had
intercepted a message from Muzaffarabad in PoK to
operatives in Bangladesh, which spoke of a retaliation
in Assam after the Udalgiri incident (in which Muslims
were targeted by Bodo militants). Fisal Naeem, the
Lashkar's Bangladesh in-charge, had revealed to his
Bangladeshi interrogators that he had met ULFA
leaders.

Over the past month, large quantities of explosives
have been seized in the North-East from militants
belonging to Muslim fundamentalist organizations. The
Army, sources said, seized 26 kg of explosives,
including over five kg of RDX, between October 1 and
November 7, mainly from border areas in Assam and
Tripura. The BSF is understood to have seized another
30 kg, among them 235 gelatine sticks, which have so
far not been used.

Clearly, sources said, a body of evidence is piling up
suggesting Bangladesh is being used in a big way as a
base from where terrorist attacks can be planned and
launched in India, particularly in the North-East.
Explosives are being smuggled with the help of N-E
militant outfits that have now lost support there. All
this is expected to be taken up with Bangladesh as
India looks to push for greater cooperation from Dhaka
in the fight against terrorism.

IX.

http://worldanalysis.net/postnuke/html/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1485

India: Deadly cocktail, say intelligence agencies

Friday, October 31, 2008 - 07:09 PM,

Vijay Thakur

NEW DELHI, Oct. 31: Intelligence agencies have
concluded that it was not HuJI alone but other
Bangladesh-based terror outfits such as Islamic Chatra
Sangh and Jamait-e-Islami that joined hands with Ulfa
in planning and executing yesterday's deadly serial
blasts in Assam.

Central Intelligence agencies had noticed suspicious
movements by Islamic Chatra Sangh and Jamait-e-Islami
cadre in Dibrugarh and Guwahati nearly 15 days back.
The information was passed on to local intelligence
agencies in Assam. A week before this top brass of
Ulfa had a meeting with HuJI leaders in Bangladesh
where the blueprint of the terror attacks may have
been finalised, intelligence officials claimed.

They said they had sufficient inputs to link a
cocktail of Ulfa, HuJI, ICS and J-e-I with the serial
blasts. "We strongly suspect that this time it is not
only Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami but also ICS and J-e-I
which had planned the terror attack with the help of
the Ulfa leadership. The close connections between
HuJI and Ulfa are no secret to intelligence agencies.
We also know that senior Ulfa leaders are getting
support of HuJI in Bangladesh where top Ulfa
leadership is hiding," the official pointed out.

While there is no denying that top Ulfa leaders have
given logistic and strategic support to these outfits
in Assam, intelligence agencies are silent on whether
the lower level Ulfa cadre is aware of this tie-up.
"Ulfa top brass cannot survive in Bangladesh without
the tacit support of HuJI, ICS and J-e-I, and we have
reasons to believe that the Assam blasts were planned
in the neighbouring country," the official said.

http://www.thestatesman.net/page.news.php?clid=2&theme=&usrsess=1&id=229098


X.
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/guwahati-was-on-jehadi-priority-list-for-long-police/379537/

Guwahati was on jehadi priority list for long: Police
Samudra Gupta Kashyap Posted online: Oct 31, 2008 at
0939 hrs

Guwahati, October 31: : As a series of explosions
rocked Assam on Thursday, the Assam police pointed the
finger of suspicion at jehadi groups, with Special
Branch IGP Khagen Sharma saying there were
intelligence reports that Guwahati always figured on
the 'priority list' of these groups.
"Our main suspicion is on the jehadi elements. We do
not have any definite and immediate clues about the
involvement of HuJI, but you never know," Sharma said.


He also did not rule out the involvement of local
groups. "But the fact remains that the primary aim is
to spread terror. That is why they have struck
simultaneously and in different towns apart from the
state capital," Sharma said.

Last month, security forces had gunned down seven
suspected jehadis in Dhurbi district close to the
Indo-Bangla border. The Assam Police had stated that
several small groups of jehadis had entered Assam from
Bangladesh and Guwahati was one of the most important
targets that they had apparently fixed.

Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, who briefed the media
later in the evening, did not have anything specific
to say except denying that there was any intelligence
failure in the state. "We had inputs about such blasts
in Guwahati. But we did not anticipate such a serious
attack," Gogoi said.

Gogoi said the government had inputs about terrorists
planning to attack Guwahati during Durga Puja and
Diwali. "I am not pinpointing any group at the moment.
A special task force is being constituted to go deep
into the incident," he said.

Guwahati's first encounter with foreign terror
operatives was almost a decade ago. The Assam Police
arrested four Islamic terrorists in the heart of the
state capital, two of whom were Pakistani nationals
—Md Fasiullah Hussaini of Hyderabad (Sind) and Md
Javed Waqar of Karachi—in August 1999. Both of them
are top activists of the Pakistan-based
Harkat-ul-Mujahideen.

Nine years after they were arrested, all four were
released by a sessions court here on June 11 due to
lack of "solid evidence". Billal Miyan, a Bangladeshi
national arrested in West Bengal, was also released
along with them.


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