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J&K: DoT order may end police-militant SIM war

The department of telecommunications’ fresh directive that will put every person applying for a second mobile connection in Jammu and Kashmir under police scrutiny from February 1 could end a deadly cat and mouse game between the police and militants. Peerzada Ashiq reports.

Updated on: Jan 31, 2013 12:52 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Srinagar
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The department of telecommunications’ fresh directive that will put every person applying for a second mobile connection in Jammu and Kashmir under police scrutiny from February 1 could end a deadly cat and mouse game between the police and militants.

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HT Image

Ever since mobile services were allowed in Kashmir in 2003, eight years after the rest of the country, it became a major tool for militants as well as the counter-insurgency grid of security forces.

Lashkar-e-Taiba’s top militant Abdullah Unni, a foreigner of disputed origin, and Jaish-e-Muhammad’s Qari Hamad used dozens of SIM cards to evade the police.

“Unni must have used more than 30 SIM cards during his operation in Sopore,” said an official.

Unni survived for more than six years in the state when an average foreign militant’s life, according to security experts, is not more than six months.

Unni and Hamad were killed in separate encounters in 2011.

The police too have relied on the ubiquitous SIM cards to infiltrate militant groups. In 2010, the police succeeded in planting SIM cards in militant ranks through moles.

 
Follow India news real-time updates and the latest news covered on Hindustan Times, featuring today's critical updates on Sonam Wangchuk LIVE and more across India.
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