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Pakistan-based terror outfits may be shifting focus to Punjab

India Rebel Attack

Indian policemen carry the body of one of their colleagues killed in a rebel attack in the town of Dinanagar, in the northern state of Punjab, India, Monday, July 27, 2015. Indian forces fought an extended gunbattle Monday with militants who attacked a moving bus and stormed into a police station in a northern town bordering Pakistan. AP

Security agencies fear that Pakistan-based terror outfits are now trying to shift partial focus from Kashmir to the border state of Punjab, where they can easily intrude and strike 鈥渁t ease鈥 as compared to the Kashmir valley.

Monday morning鈥檚 daring attack on a police station in Gurdaspur was the first 聽step in this direction, security experts said. It is the first major terror strike in Punjab after almost two decades. The last major terror strike was reported in 1991, when Sikh terrorists killed over 80 people in two trains in Ludhiana district.

One terror attack was reported in Ludhiana in 2007, when a cinema complex was bombed, allegedly by Babbar Khalsa terrorists. The Gurdaspur attack is the first major Fidayeen strike in Punjab after Beant Singh鈥檚 killing in 1995 allegedly by a Khalistan Liberation Force suicide bomber.

Security agencies said it is too early to comment on who was involved in the Gurdaspur terror strike, but they suspect Pakistan-based terror outfits 鈥渨ho seem to have taken assistance from local sleeper cells.鈥

鈥淚t was a well-thought-out, well-planned attack. Despite the fact that only three terrorists were involved, the damage they have done is much more than what was expected,鈥 said a senior officer of a security agency.

鈥淭hree terrorists engaged police and army personnel for over 12 hours. That is 聽not easy,鈥 the officer said. While it is not yet clear which route they took to intrude into India and when they actually entered the country, there is a clear indication that such an operation cannot be done without local help, said another officer.

鈥淲e have been receiving inputs for the past five years that Pak-supported terror outfits have been trying to revive terrorism in the state, but this is the first successful strike by terrorists in Punjab,鈥 he said.

Another security expert said Fidayeen attacks were not very common in Punjab as it is generally the Kashmir terrorists who conduct such operations in Jammu and other bordering districts in the Valley. What is worrying security agencies are inputs that Kashmiri terror outfits have managed to build 鈥渁ssets鈥 in Punjab鈥檚 rural areas with the help of Pakistan-based Sikh terrorists. 鈥淚f this is true, we would see similar suicide attacks in Punjab in the coming years,鈥 the officer said.

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