It is a particularly tense and tough day for Lieutenant General D.P. Pandey, General-Officer-Commanding of the Indian Army’s Srinagar-based Chinar or 15 Corps that guards the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir, apart from carrying out counter-insurgency operations in the Valley along with the J&K police. On July 2, a combined party of the security forces had closed in on five terrorists in the Rajpora area of Pulwama district and, in the ensuing encounter, killed all of them, including a district commander of the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT). But a havildar of the army’s 44 Rashtriya Rifles was also killed. There was grief in Pandey’s eyes as his aide sent him a slip about the death of one of his men.
Pandey is a veteran of counterinsurgency operations in J&K. Earlier, he commanded the Kilo Force of the Rashtriya Rifles that guards Kupwara, Baramulla and Srinagar. Notwithstanding the encounter that claimed one of his soldiers, Pandey says with quiet confidence: “Based on all security parameters, the current situation in the Valley is very good. Terrorist incidents, atrocities committed by terrorists, use of explosive devices, civilian fatalities, stone-pelting and other law and order issues are all significantly down.” Elaborating on how things have improved, he says: “The parameters of violence are 50-60 per cent down from five years ago. As for protests, stone-pelting is not even 10 per cent of what it was in the past. Recruitment [of militants] from the local cadre is also on a decline this year. I won’t say it has reduced to a great degree, but it has come down a lot.”
Esta historia es de la edición July 26, 2021 de India Today.
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Esta historia es de la edición July 26, 2021 de India Today.
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