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Now, terrorists using mobile data of unsuspecting civilians to escape security radar

Taking serious note of the new modus operandi adopted by terrorists and their overground workers to escape security radars, the officials said wrong use of a SIM card or providing communication facility to a terrorist through ‘hotspot’ will make the subscriber of the card liable for investigation and arrest

Updated on: Apr 14, 2022 06:28 PM IST
By , Srinagar
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The phone could be in your hand but another person, possibly a militant or a sympathiser, could be using its ‘hotspot’ facility, say police officials, red-flagging the latest modus operandi of terrorists in Kashmir and warning unsuspecting civilians about the trouble they could land in.

Terrorists and their associates have now been communicating with each other and their handlers in Pakistan by using hotspots of SIM cards and devices of those less likely to be suspected by police. (Representative Image/HT)
Terrorists and their associates have now been communicating with each other and their handlers in Pakistan by using hotspots of SIM cards and devices of those less likely to be suspected by police. (Representative Image/HT)

Taking serious note of the new modus operandi adopted by terrorists and their overground workers to escape security radars, the officials said wrong use of a SIM card or providing communication facility to a terrorist through ‘hotspot’ will make the subscriber of the card liable for investigation and arrest.

“SIM card subscribers cannot hide behind the fact that they themselves are not into terrorism and that their SIM card has not been used directly by the terrorists. Allowing one’s SIM card to be used through ‘hotspot’ is direct liability according to police,” an official told PTI on condition of anonymity. The relatively new way of operating came to light during in-depth investigation of a terror network case. In October last year, based on intelligence inputs, police nabbed Mukhtar Ahmad Kumar from south Kashmir’s Pulwama district under the stringent Public Safety Act (PSA) and shifted him to a prison in Agra.

The clinching evidence, they said, is the SIM card. Terrorists and their associates have now been communicating with each other and their handlers in Pakistan by using hotspots of SIM cards and devices of those less likely to be suspected by police.

“A lot of people do not know how to set a password to block access to their mobile hotspot. As a result, chances of the misuse of their SIM cards increase manifold,” an official said, adding that police are reaching out to people to help them make their mobile phones secure.

He said awareness campaigns have started, particularly in rural areas, about the importance of using a password.

 
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