Five bodies of CoBRA personnel recovered from Dantewada forest

Dantewada, Sep 19 (ANI): Five more bodies of personnel of the elite anti -Naxal force Commando Battalion for Resolute Action (CoBRA) have been recovered from the Dantewada Forests in Chattisgarh.

A major offensive was launched against the Naxals following specific intelligence inputs about them being present in the forest.

According to CoBRA sources, the bodies of Assistant Commandant Rakesh Chaurasia, a sub-inspector, a head constable and two constables were recovered during a combing operation in the thick forests near Singamadagu.

On Friday, Assistant Commandant Manoranjan Singh was killed during a gunbattle. So far, the death toll has been pegged at six.

Security forces also unearthed an arms manufacturing unit.

Nine Naxals have been killed during Operation red Hunt so far.(ANI)

Lashkar militant killed in Kashmir gunbattle

Jammu, Aug 27 (ANI): One Lashkar-e-Toiba militant was killed in a gunbattle with security forces in Jammu and Kashmir’s Kishtwar district on Thursday.

Acting on tip off, a combined team of army and police launched a search operation in Keshwan forest area, about 290 km from here.

According to police, a gun battle broke out when the militants fired on the joint operation party.

The encounter was continuing when last reports came in from the area. (ANI)

One Hizbul militant killed in Jammu and Kashmir encounter

Jammu, Aug 25 (ANI): A top Hizbul Mujahideen militant was killed in a gunbattle with security forces in Jammu and Kashmir’s Reasi district this morning.

Acting on a tip off, police assisted by security forces launched a search operation in Hejzam area of Mahore tehsil, 190 kms from here.

According to police, a gun battle broke out when the militants fired on the joint operation party.wo more militants were still in the cordon.

The encounter was continuing when last reports came in from the area. (ANI)

Afghanistan Election | Afghanistan Election 2009 | Afghan Elections | Afghan Elections 2009 | Voters turnout in good numbers in Afghanistan Election 2009

Afghanistan Election | Afghanistan Election 2009 | Afghan Elections | Afghan Elections 2009 | Voters turnout in good numbers in Afghanistan Election 2009

Afghanistan election authority said turnout in today’s presidential and provincial polls was “very good” half way through voting and predicted it could reach around 50 %.

Some 95% of 6,500 polling stations had opened and only 312 centres had remained closed, Independent Election Commission official Zekria Barakzai said.

TheĀ  commission had initially planned to open all pooling centres but could not do so because of poor security.

The Taliban threatened to attack the polls and authorities reported several small attacks across the country, including a Kabul gunbattle and some directed at polling stations, but voting appeared to proceed smoothly.

“The turnout is very good but we don’t have exact figures,” said Barakzai, deputy chief electoral officer.

One soldier, two militants killed in Handwara forest encounter

Handwara (Jammu and Kashmir), July 4 (ANI): One soldier and two militants were killed Saturday during a major gunbattle in Jammu and Kashmir’s Handwara District.

Preliminary reports said that the encounter between the security forces and the militants was still raging on in Rajwada forest area of the North Kashmir district.

Sources quoted security forces as saying that more militants are hiding in the forest. (ANI)

Top LeT commander killed in Jammu and Kashmir

Srinagar, May 9 (ANI): At least three militants have been killed in two separate incidents in Jammu and Kashmir on Saturday.

In Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district, a top Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) commander and his local militant associate have been killed in a fierce gun-battle with security forces early on Saturday.

LeT’s self-styled divisional commander Abu Sumama, resident of Pakistan, and his local aide Barkat Ali alias Yasir were killed by the counter-insurgency forces in Dhar Dashnan hills near Doda town early this morning.

A combing and search operation was launched by security forces in the area following specific information about the presence of militants, an official spokesman said.

”Contact with the militants, who were holed up in an isolated dhoke (cattle shed), was established at about 0100 hrs,” he added.

One AK rifle and a pistol were recovered from the site of operation.

Encounter of Sumama, who was active in the area for the past four to five years, is said to be a big blow to the LeT in Doda.

According to the spokesman, one army jawan also sustained wounds in the gun-battle.

In Ganderbal district, a militant has been killed in an encounter with security forces on Saturday, army sources said.

On Saturday morning security forces sealed Kangan area that is 40 kilometers from Srinagar.

As the troops zeroed in at a particular house, where the militants were hiding, the ultras opened fire at the forces and in the ensuing gunbattle a militant was killed.

The operation was still in progress when reports last came in, the sources said. (ANI)

Lashkar ‘divisional commander’, aide killed in J-K

Jammu, May 9 (ANI): A self-styled divisional Lashker-e-Toiba (LeT) commander and his aide were killed in a gunbattle with security forces in Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district early this morning.

According to sources, the army and police threw a tight cordon around the Dhar Dashnan hills near Doda town late on Friday night following a tip off about the presence of militants. Lashkar self-styled commander Abu Sumama and his aide Barkat Ali alias Yasir were killed.

One soldier also sustained injuries in the gun-battle. An AK rifle and a pistol were recovered from the site of operation.
In another incident in Ganderbal district, a militant was killed in an encounter with security forces.

Acting on a specific information, security forces sealed the Kangan area to flush out the militants.

The operation was still in progress. (ANI)

Naxals attack Jharkhand CRPF camp, encounter still on

Ranchi, Apr 23 (ANI): A few hours before polling for the second phase of Lok Sabha elections began today, Naxals struck a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camp and blew up a railway station in Jharkhand.

According to police, the Naxals attacked the CRPF camp in West Singhbhum District.

The gunbattle between the militants and the security personnel is still on, official sources informed.

The rebels also bombed the outer cabin of a railway station here. The police is unable to detect the whereabouts of the cabin man and porter since then.

The police further revealed that Naxal rebels have also blasted a road between Giridih and Dumri and cut trees to block it to prevent the people from voting.

On Wednesday, the Naxals took 700-800 people hostage as they were travelling in a train from Barkana in Jharkhand to Mugalsarai in Uttar Pradesh. The Naxals had taken the train to the Latehar Railway Station.

They released the passengers more than four hours later.

The second phase of polling is underway in eight Lok Sabha constituencies in Jharkhand.

Previously, the Naxals had disrupted the first phase of the five-phased general elections.

On April 16, the Naxals had struck at 14 places, killing at least 16 people. (ANI)

Five militants gunned down in Assam

Guwahati, April 20 (IANS) Five separatist guerrillas were killed in a gunbattle with army soldiers in Assam early Monday. A large quantity of weapons and explosives were recovered from the militants, a defence spokesperson said.

The gunbattle began Sunday midnight and continued for about three hours near Akabasti village near Tezpur town, about 185 km north of Assam’s main city of Guwahati.

‘A group of about five militants were camping in a house in the village with a specific mission to kidnap a well-known businessman for ransom,’ defence spokesperson R. Kalia told IANS.

Security forces got wind of the plan and laid an ambush.

‘There was a firefight for about three hours in which five militants were killed,’ the official said.

Three of the dead rebels belonged to the outlawed National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB), while the other two were from the Muslim United Liberation Tigers of Asom (MULTA).

‘It was a collective plan by the NDFB and the MULTA to kidnap the businessman,’ Kalia said.

The NDFB is a rebel group fighting for an independent homeland for the Bodo tribe in Assam although the group is now operating a ceasefire with New Delhi, while the MULTA is a rag-tag Islamist separatist group active in certain pockets of Assam since 1996.

‘Five kilograms of explosives, 10 detonators and some other arms and ammunition were recovered from the dead militants,’ the army official said.
Indo Asian News Service

Five militants killed in India’s restive Assam state

New Delhi – At least five separatist rebels were killed in an encounter with government troops in India’s north-eastern state of Assam Monday, a news report said.

The combat between rebels belonging two separatist militant outfits, the National Democratic Front of Bodoland and Muslim United Liberation Tigers of Assam and the army took place in central Sonitpur district, the PTI news agency reported quoting defence sources.

After a fierce gunbattle that lasted nearly four hours, three NDFB and two MULTA militants were killed at 1 am local time, the report said.

Arms and ammunition including pistols, grenades, explosives and detonators were recovered from the slain militants.

India’s north-east, which shares borders with China, Myanmar and Bangladesh, is a volatile region where nearly 40 separatist, tribal or leftist groups are active in five states.

More than 15,000 people have lost their lives to insurgency in the region in the past decade. (dpa)

Two separatist rebels killed in Indian Kashmir

Srinagar, Kashmir – Two militants of the Lashkar-e-Taiba group and their female associate were killed in a shootout with security forces in India-administered Kashmir on Saturday, police said.

The combat took place near a village in the Doda district about 180 kilometres north-east of the state’s winter capital Jammu, after a joint army-police team started search operations.

“The two militants were active in the area and were behind many killings and abductions. They were eliminated in the gunbattle which lasted for an hour,” senior police official Parbhat Singh said.

A woman who was with the militants and was believed to be linked with the LeT was also killed.

According to Indian intelligence agencies, rebels are planning to increase the levels of violence in the region as the nationwide elections get underway.

The disputed Kashmir region is divided into two parts, one administered by India the other by Pakistan. The neighbours have fought two wars over the disputed region.

More than 45,000 people have died in violence since violent secessionist militant movement emerged in the 1980s.

India has repeatedly accused Pakistan of aiding Kashmiri militants. Islamabad denies the charge, calling the insurgents freedom fighters. (dpa)

13 killed in Mexico clashes

Mexico City, April 16 (EFE) At least 13 people have been killed in a gunbattle between the military and suspected drug traffickers in southern Mexican state of Guerrero, authorities said Thursday.

The clash occurred Wednesday in San Nicolas del Oro, a town near the city of San Miguel Totolapan, during an operation by the security forces in the remote area, Guerrero’s Public Security Minister Juan Heriberto Salinas Altes said.

He said the clash started when the suspected drug traffickers opened fire on a military patrol near the town.

‘Twelve suspected gunmen and an army soldier died in the shootout,’ prosecutors told EFE, adding that the soldiers seized 20 assault rifles, several pistols, explosives from nine vehicles they were travelling in.

The shooting happened just hours ahead of US President Barack Obama’s visit to the country. Obama was set to arrive in Mexico City Thursday, for a brief visit focused on the fight against drug gangs.

Mexico has been plagued in recent years by drug-related violence, with powerful cartels battling each other and the security forces, as rival gangs vie for control of lucrative smuggling and distribution routes.

Armed groups linked to Mexico’s drug cartels murdered around 1,500 people in 2006 and 2,700 people in 2007, with the 2008 death toll soaring to more than 6,000.

So far this year, more than 1,750 people have died.

Abducted polling officials rescued after night-long gunbattle

Latehar (Jharkhand), Apr 17 (ANI): The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) on Friday rescued six abducted polling officials after an overnight gunbattle with the guerrillas.

The officials, including two state police constables, were kidnapped on Thursday from Kumanuli village.

According to officials, naxals kidnapped the polling officials when they were on their way to their respective polling stations.

A massive search and rescue operation was launched after the naxals took the kidnapped officials deep into the jungles. (ANI)

Seven killed during Maoist attack on CRPF bus in Jharkhand district

Lathear (Jharkhand), Apr.15 (ANI): Seven people, including five Maoist rebels, were killed during an attack on a CRPF bus in Jharkhand’s Lathear District, about 105 kilometres from state capital Ranchi. he bus was carrying around 80 CRPF personnel and was ambushed near Nimiadih village late Tuesday.

New reports said Maoist rebels first detonated a landmine and then started firing indiscriminately. The security personnel retaliated with gunfire.

harkhand police spokesperson S N Pradhan said: “The bus driver was killed on the spot and one security personnel died on the way to hospital. The bodies of five Maoist rebels have also been recovered.”

Four injured security personnel have been admitted to the Apollo Hospital in Ranchi for treatment.

The Lathear attack came shortly before Maoist rebels attacked a Border Security Force (BSF) camp near Ratnag in Palamau district, about 190 km from here.

There were around 70 BSF personnel in the camp, which was set up to ensure peaceful polling. The gunbattle between the guerrillas and security personnel lasted several hours. One BSF soldier was injured in the attack.

The six parliamentary constituencies that go to the polls in the first phase of elections Thursday are considered Maoist strongholds. The polling will be conducted under air surveillance by five India Air Force (IAF) helicopters. (ANI)

Combing operations in Orissa intensified to nab Maoists

Koratpur (Orissa), Apr 14 (ANI): With a view of preventing any further attacks by the Maoist rebels, Central forces on Tuesday intensified combing operations in Orissa’s Koratpur District.

On Sunday night, around 200 heavily armed Maoists had launched a daring attack on the National Aluminium Company’s (NALCO) bauxite mines in Koraput district.

The gunbattle between the ultras and the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) personnel, which lasted for 10 hours, took the lives of 11 CISF men. Bodies of four Maoists, including a woman, were recovered.

The audacious attack, in which more than 100 mineworkers were taken hostage, has prompted the police force to initiate a joint operation to get rid of the Maoists in the area.

Director General of Police Manmohan Praharaj informed that the security forces have recovered huge reserve of explosives and arms looted by the Maoists during their raid on the Nalco.

According to sources, security personnel found a van containing explosives, which had been driven away and abandoned at an isolated place by the ultras.

Also, about 230 boxes containing explosives were recovered by the security forces after a severe exchange of fire with the fleeing ultras.

However, it is suspected that the Naxals have been successful in taking away some amount of the explosives. (ANI)

15 killed as Maoists seize bauxite mine in eastern India

New Delhi – Eleven security personnel and four Maoist rebels were killed in a 10-hour gunbattle after the rebels laid siege to India’s largest bauxite mine in the eastern state of Orissa, police said Monday. A group of 100 armed Maoist rebels laid siege to the state-run National Aluminium Company’s bauxite mine at Panchpatmali in Koraput district, some 370 kilometres south-west of Orissa’s capital Bhubaneshwar late Sunday.

At least 80 mine employees, who were about to leave the mine when the rebels attacked, were held hostage, Orissa police chief MM Prahraj was quoted as saying by Times Now television channel.

The Maoists fled after a 10-hour gunbattle that ended in the early hours of Monday and all mine employees were safe, Prahraj said.

The rebels also attacked a nearby camp of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) which looks after security at the mine.

“Eleven CISF personnel and four Maoists were killed,” Prahraj said.

Some arms and ammunition were reportedly looted from the CISF armoury, Times Now reported.

The entire area was booby trapped with landmines, making it difficult for police and paramilitary support forces to reach the area.

Orissa’s Koraput district is due to hold balloting on Thursday in the first phase of India’s general elections.

Maoist rebels have upped their attacks on government installations in the run-up to the elections. (dpa)

Afghan, international forces kill 40 suspected Taliban

Kabul – Afghan and international forces killed 40 suspected Taliban militants in the latest clashes in southern and eastern Afghanistan, while a suicide bomber killed himself and wounded a civilian in the northern region, officials said Sunday. The police chief of Afghanistan’s restive southern Zabul province claimed Sunday that Afghan forces backed by US-led coalition air support killed 22 suspected insurgents in a clash.

The militants ambushed a convoy of Afghan soldiers and international troops in the province’s Shinkay district on Saturday night, sparking a fierce battle that lasted for four hours, Abdul Rahman Sarjang, the provincial police chief said.

Shortly after the battle erupted, Afghan police forces and coalition aircraft joined the fight and killed 22 insurgents, Sarjang said.

“The bodies of the militants are still on the battlefield and four of them have been identified to be Pakistani nationals,” he said, adding there were no casualties on the joint forces side.

The US military in a statement also said US troops killed four insurgents in Shinkay on Saturday but it was not clear if both Sarjang and the military statement were referring to the same incident.

Taliban spokesman, Qari Mohammad Yousif Ahmadi said that only three of their fighters were killed in the gunbattle, but claimed that Taliban fighters killed 48 Afghan and international soldiers.

Due to the remoteness of the area, it was difficult to get independent verification of the conflicting accounts.

Meanwhile, NATO-led forces in the eastern province of Kunar killed 18 suspected militants in a clash in which close-air support and attack helicopters were also used on Saturday, the alliance said in a statement.

The NATO forces seized 10 AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenade launchers with ammunition, five radios and two hand grenades, the statement said, adding there were no casualties on the military side.

Separately, the first suicide attack since the fall of Taliban regime in late 2001 happened in the relatively peaceful province of Samangan province on Sunday, police chief Sharafuddin Sharaf said.

He said a bomber tried to enter the governor’s office in Aibak, the provincial capital city, but his explosive-filled vest detonated prematurely in front of the government building, he said.

“The bomber who seems to be a boy of around 16 years was killed and a woman was wounded,” he said, adding that the attack happened when the provincial governor was meeting with other local authorities.

In the south-eastern province of Khost, Afghan commando forces discovered and disabled a vehicle packed with explosives intended for use in a car bombing, the US military statement said.

The vehicle was left by the side of a road in Sabari district of the province, it said.

Police forces in the Garmsir district of the southern Helmand province identified and killed a would-be suicide bomber, who was approaching a police station on Saturday, the interior ministry said in statement.

The blast, which was triggered by the explosives-filled vest killed the bomber, but caused no other casualties, it said.

More than seven years since the fall of Taliban regime after the US military invasion, Taliban militants are still a force to be reckoned with.

The insurgents have gained more strength in the past three years, forcing the US government to plan the deployment of 21,000 additional combat troops and military trainers to contain the insurgency this year.

New forces will bring to 90,000 the number of international troops deployed to Afghanistan from 42 nations. (dpa)

Central Government reviews security at Orissa’s NALCO mines

New Delhi, Apr 13 (ANI): The Ministry of Mines on Monday conducted a detailed review of security arrangements at the National Aluminium Company Limited’s (NALCO) Damanjodi Mines following Naxal attack.

An urgent meeting of officials of the Mines and Home Ministries and NALCO, besides Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) representatives was held here.

It was decided to implement both immediate and long-term security measures for PSUs. Follow up meetings are also taking place at the State Government level.

On Sunday night, seven CISF personnel and four Maoists were killed in a gunbattle that took place in Orissa’s Koraput District.

Over 100 miners were taken hostage, but were later freed.

Before leaving the area, the Maoists, including some women, robbed the CISF of huge quantities of sophisticated arms, ammunition and explosives.

The Maoist attack was apparently aimed at unsettling the upcoming polls process. (ANI)

Five die in gunbattle with Taliban militants

At least five people died in a gun battle with Taliban militants in the Swat valley.

The clash puts more pressure on Pakistan government’s efforts to reach a peace accord in the troubled region.

Provincial officials agreed in February to impose Islamic law in Swat and surrounding areas to halt 18 months of terror and bloody fighting between militants and security forces that killed hundreds of people.

However, Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari has yet to sign an order introducing the new legal system, fuelling predictions that the flimsy peace in the area won’t hold.

Five Indian policemen killed in gunbattle with Maoist rebels

New Delhi – Five police were killed and three injured Saturday in an eight-hour-long gunbattle with Maoist rebels in eastern Indian state Jharkhand, about 20 kilometres from where Congress Party president Sonia Gandhi addressed an election rally. Maoist rebels, who operate in 13 of India’s 29 states, have increased attacks on government installations in the run-up to the general elections which are scheduled to begin Thursday.

“Five CRPF (Central Reserve Police Force) personnel were killed and three were injured in an ambush by Maoist rebels in Khuti district,” IANS news agency quoted Jharkhand Police spokesman SN Pradhan as saying.

Police said the gunbattle at Musanga Jorpa jungle, about 70 kilometres south of Jharkhand capital Ranchi, began Saturday morning and ended at around noon a little before Sonia Gandhi addressed a rally in the area,

Paramilitary forces patrolling the area ahead of Gandhi’s arrival came upon a group of Maoist rebels. When asked to surrender, the rebels fired and the gunbattle followed.

Maoist rebels have blown up 11 government buildings in Palamau, Latehar, Garwah, Gumla, Chatra and Bokaro districts of the state over the past week. Their targets have included schools, village-level government offices and pre-school centres.

The string of attacks is aimed at preventing security personnel from staying in these buildings during elections, IANS quoted a police source as saying.

Two-phased parliamentary elections are scheduled to be held in Jharkhand on Thursday and April 23.

On Friday, nine CRPF troopers, including an officer, were killed in an attack by another group of about 100 armed Maoist rebels in Bastar district of neighbouring Chhattisgarh state.

Chhattisgarh is also scheduled to go to the hustings on Thursday, the first day of voting in India’s month-long five-phase elections.

Maoist rebels have asked people to boycott the elections.

According to independent estimates, more than 600 people including civilians, police and rebels were killed in Maoist violence in India in 2008.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has described the Maoist insurgency as one of the gravest internal security threats facing India. (dpa)