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Indian special forces carry out cross border operation into Myanmar. Several militants Killed

BS. Govt did not give go ahead for army to proceed. Had the same been given, your "superior" and "mobile" army would be eating mud...

Instead, indian army ate Pakistan Military's sh!t and went back with their tails between their legs after loosing almost 2000 soldiers at the hand of superior forces of Pak.

Fact remains fact!!!
 
OMG..........using US terminology is not going to make you a supa powa, come back to mother earth and watch out lest you step on some freshly throttled out signature indian pile of stinking dump

The message is very clear by indian army 'If you hurt us, we will hunt you down'
 
Instead, indian army ate Pakistan Military's sh!t and went back with their tails between their legs after loosing almost 2000 soldiers at the hand of superior forces of Pak.

Fact remains fact!!!
This might be a "fact" specially brewed for pakistanis by pakistanis....but you are half right about pak army shitting....
 
The Governor of Arunachal Pradesh, Shri Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa calling on the Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, in New Delhi on June 13, 2015.
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The Governor of Arunachal Pradesh, Shri Jyoti Prasad Rajkhowa calling on the Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, in New Delhi on June 13, 2015.
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Two NSCN-K militants arrested in Manipur: Police | Zee News
Last Updated: Saturday, June 13, 2015 - 13:27
Imphal: In the aftermath of the June 4 ambush on an Army convoy in which 18 soldiers were killed, three militants, including two NSCN(K) insurgents, have been arrested in Manipur.

A self-styled 'chairman' of NSCN(K)'s 'Amamchat region', Khumlo Abi Anal, was nabbed by Imphal West district police commandos during a search operation in a super market under Lamphel police station on June 11 last, a press release issued by the Manipur police said.

He hails from Lambung village of Chandel district, the release said.

The police commandos also arrested another NSCN(K) activist Pammei Kakilong alias Kaling 9310 of Chingkhulong village of Tamenglong district while conducting frisking at Sagolband Salam Leikai in Imphal West district on June 11, the release said.

In another search operation conducted jointly by Imphal East police commandos and 40 Assam Rifles at Kiyamgei village in Imphal East district on June 10 last, one Md Jahid Ali (22), an activist of outlawed Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP-MC) outfit, was arrested, the release said.

PTI
 
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Four Bodo militants arrested from Bengaluru - The Hindu
Updated: June 13, 2015 12:46 IST
They were working at a private plastic factory in Peenya Industrial Area
In an early morning joint operation between the Internal Security Division (ISD) of the state and Assam Police, four wanted Bodo militants have been arrested from a house in Srigandha Kaval, within Rajagopalnagar Police station limits in the city on Saturday.

The arrested have been identified as Tomar Basumatri, Sandan Basumatri, Naseen Basumatri and Jibal Nursery, all in their early twenties. The four militants were working at a private plastic factory in Peenya Industrial Area and are said to have been hiding in the city from the past one year. The Assam police who have been investigating the Bodo militant network in Assam, chanced upon the gang hiding in the city and tipped off the ISD, sources said.

The ISD is working with the Assam police to track down other Bodo militants who may be hiding in the city and the State as well.
 
By Bharti Jain, TNN | 13 Jun, 2015, 11.08AM IST
Home ministry believes 83 rebels killed in June 9 Army operation - The Economic Times

NEW DELHI: Even as there is no official confirmation yet on the casualties suffered by NSCN(K) and other insurgent outfits in Tuesday's Army crackdown on their camps in Myanmar, intelligence reports with the home ministry indicate that at least 19 insurgents killed on Tuesday were given a soldier's farewell on Thursday , with a burial in the presence of a Buddhist religious leader.

The information regarding the burial of insurgents' bodies in the presence of a lama came from intelligence assets both on Indian and Myanmar side of the border, said a home ministry official. The ministry has also learnt from multiple sources, including those based in villages dotting the Myanmar-Manipur border and trusted aides in touch with Myanmar officials, that around 49 bodies were removed from the site where the camps stood after the Army raid flattened them. In addition, as many as 60 injured cadres were shifted out in 12-13 vehicles to safer locations in Kalemyo, Mandalay and beyond.

The estimated 68 casualties in PLA and Manipur Naga Revolutionary Front camps across the Manipur border is over and above the 15 NSCN(K) insurgents believed to have been killed as they vacated a camp across Nagaland-Myanmar border soon after the Army special forces struck on Tuesday , a source told TOI.

Home ministry officials insist their casualty estimates are credible since they are based on ground reports collated after speaking to local villagers and sources in touch with the Myanmar army and intelligence agencies.There were inputs that the search for bodies has not been abandoned yet. The officials claimed that the figures are more or less corroborated by ground reports collected by Military Intelligence.

Reports coming in a day after the raid had indicated that 30 insurgents were killed and six injured. This figure was further revised to 38 killed and 12 injured. However, fresh intelligence inputs on Friday pointed to a much higher casualty figure at 68 killed in camps across Manipur and 15 across Nagaland, besides 60 injured.
 
14 Jun, 2015, 01.16AM IST
Myanmar operation sends a larger political message: India will pay back, if provoked - The Economic Times

For the Indian Army's 21 Para (Special Forces) unit, it was just another day at the office. Once the Cabinet Committee on Security ( CCS), India's highest decision making body on matters of security, authorised a cross-border raid on a couple of insurgent camps inside Myanmar last weekend, the 21 Para ( SF), stationed at Jorhat in Assam as the Eastern Command's strategic asset for specialised operations, was the automatic choice.

A unit with many crucial achievements in the continuous battle of attrition with north-east militants, 21 Para (SF)'s most celebrated and publiclyknown success in recent memory was Operation Summer Storm in April 2009 when it neutralised a group of Meitei insurgents using the Loktak Lake in Manipur as a hideout. It of course carries out frequent small operations to hit specified targets that provide other units an opening during counter-insurgency campaigns across the north-east.

So even before the political clearance came, the unit was already making its plans and obtaining intelligence that is crucial in such operations. Both HUMINT (human intelligence) and ELINT (Electronic intelligence) inputs on the exact locations, the strength of the occupants of the camps and the firepower available with the insurgents were sought and obtained.

It took another 48 hours to practise and mobilise the two columns that would attack the camps. Unlike the other operations that 21 Para (SF) routinely does, this was to be conducted inside Myanmar, albeit just 6-7 km from the border. Although under a 2010 agreement, Indian security forces are allowed to enter Myanmar while chasing insurgents, the Myanmarese government and its army were informed about the possible operation without specifying time and date.


Ready to Go

Primed for action, the troops were launched into the operation in the intervening night of June 8-9. Two camps were hit, several insurgents killed, the camps were razed to the ground and in less than five hours, all soldiers were back inside Indian territory, unscathed from the encounter.

Now came the most crucial phase: the battle of perception. The government needed to send multiple messages to different constituencies without compromising on operational and tactical details.

At one level, it had to signal the change in mindset at the highest level in responding to provocative acts such as the ambush on the Army that killed 18 soldiers on June 4. At another, India's adversaries needed to know that there is a cost to pay if the country's interests are harmed.

So a senior Army officer issued a terse statement which merely said, "The Indian Army engaged two separate groups of insurgents along the Indo-Myanmar border at two locations, along the Nagaland and Manipur borders. Significant casualties have been inflicted on them. As a consequence, threats to our civilian population and security forces were averted." No other details were shared. Neither was any footage or photographs. But it was enough to send a signal to north-east insurgents that they were no longer safe even outside the boundaries of India.

However, the Army statement by itself would not have satiated the huge media demand for more information. So the junior information and broadcasting minister Rajyavardhan Rathore — note that it was neither defence minister Manohar Parrikar nor home minister Rajnath Singh — a former Army Colonel, was instructed to give interviews to television channels. The intention was to send a larger political message: India will not waste time in ordering retribution, if provoked.


Although some of Rathore's statements were rather ill-considered, overall, his interviews hit hard where they were intended. Pakistan was not named but Rathore's statement triggered intense reaction in Islamabad with all and sundry reminding India that Pakistan was not Myanmar. Of course, everyone knows the difference between a cross-border raid in Myanmar (which has a friendly regime in place) and any such operation in Pakistan. No two sets of circumstances are the same. Neither is the context. There are several other factors that will go into deciding on any special operation elsewhere.

Look Who Reacted!


But the fact that a remark from a junior minister provoked even the top decision-makers in Pakistan —Army Chief Raheel Sharif and prime minister Nawaz Sharif — into making hostile statements and the Pakistan Senate to pass a resolution condemning India's 'hegemonic' mindset reflects the guilt in Pakistan establishment's mind about harbouring terrorists. After all, neither Sri Lanka nor Bangladesh — whose soil has been used in the past for anti-India activities — reacted to Rathore's statement.

In the past too, India has carried out covert and special operations but New Delhi chose to stay silent mostly. Not anymore. The government has been criticised for making a covert operation public but think again: has it really revealed anything that would compromise operational security? No. It has actually used a tactical special operation for a larger messaging. Nothing wrong in doing that in today's media-driven world.

(The writer is a defence analyst and a long time commentator on the north-east)
 
Myanmar operation was not covert, our soldiers were in uniform: Union Minister Rajyavardhan Rathore | Zee News
Last Updated: Sunday, June 14, 2015 - 19:35

Delhi: Union Minister Rajyavardhan Rathore said on Sunday that the Myanmar operation was not covert operation but overt and that the Indian Army soldiers were in uniform.

Talking to ANI he said, “This was not a covert operation. In covert operation, soldiers don't wear uniform. In this operation, it was overt, our soldiers were in uniform, TV journalists should know all this.”

About how the operation by Indian Army had rattled Pakistan, Rathore said, “Attack was somewhere else but pain was felt elsewhere. Pakistan reacted, their PM also made a statement. Why even General Musharraf gave a threatening statement. He barely got permission to enter his own country, but threatened India.”
 
While they were sleeping...
Jun 13, 2015 - Gururaj A. Paniyadi


  • The Indo-Myanmar border near Teknyo village

    Subedar Raghupathi, who hails from Sullia, is home for some much-needed R&R. But what his wife Bharathi and other members of his inner circle didn’t know until he walked through the door of their home on an arecanut farm at Mandekolu village, in a remote corner of Karnataka’s Sullia, is that Raghupathi had led a team of commandos into Myanmar to lay waste to a militant camp under cover of darkness, and then as quickly hot-footed it back to the Indian side. A Myanmarese insider took them through the dense jungle and the troops of 21 Para crept up on the sleeping militants and burnt their camps to a cinder. In the first such account of the actual operation, the brave subedar tells Gururaj A. Paniyadi that there was not one moment of doubt that they would succeed.

    On the morning of June 6, Bharathi called to wish her husband Subedar Raghupathi U.M. of the 21 Para (Special Forces) on their 14th anniversary. She noticed at once that he seemed very distracted and quite unlike his usual, gregarious self. What Bharathi didn’t know was that her husband’s focus was concentrated on what would become one of the Indian Army’s most celebrated strikes – the cross-border attack into militant camps deep inside Myanmar, one that has shaken India’s neighbours, who have become accustomed to a government that always played it by the book.

    Raghupathi, who just about remembered to wish his wife on their anniversary, merely said that he was busy preparing for an ‘operation’ that he was about to set out on, which he couldn’t discuss. He also told her that he would not be available on the telephone for the next three to four days.

    It was only after his safe return that Bharathi learned the shocking truth – her husband was part of the crack team of commandos who entered Myanmar and eliminated about 50 Northeast insurgents. While Raghupathi remained a faceless, nameless operative, the operation, which drew international attention transformed India from a country known more for its passive stance into one that would no longer stand for any challenges to its sovereignty.

    Raghupathi, who hails from Mandekolu village of Sullia taluk in D.K. district, comes from a long line of fighters. Signing up to join the Maratha Regiment in 1991, he completed his Para Commando course and joined the elite 21 Para (SF) in 1996. His family lives in Sullia and his elder brother is a serving member of the CISF in Rajasthan. Both brothers were inspired by an uncle, who is serving in the Army.

    “I am proud that I was part of this prestigious operation that killed the Northeast insurgents. We were successful in killing the terrorists who had killed our jawans in Manipur few days ago. It was special as it was a cross border operation. This strike has surely increased the morale of our armed forces,” Raghupathi told this newspaper.

    Subedar Raghupathi was the squad commander during the operation, which was carried out by two teams. While one team had been pulled together from Manipur, the other team of 21 Para (SF) team with 57 commandos had gone in from Nagaland.

    “I was not hesitant or scared. This was not my first operation. I was part of several such operations including Operation Loktak. But this was really challenging as we had to walk for about 30 kms, cross the Indian border on foot and enter Myanmar without being noticed by the enemy,” he said.

    Within hours of the Chandel ambush, the army began gathering details of the enemy, with the commandos being put on alert for a possible attack on the militant’s camps. The daily gruelling drills that they normally endured were now stretched over about three days, Subedar Raghupathi said.

    As the commandos, who included both ambush and attack teams, had to ensure the operation remained under wraps, they went through the motions of joining the Assam Rifles team that left to Teknyo village on the morning of June 6, ostensibly to a medical camp.

    The real challenge began after the team left the medical camp and began marching towards the border with every commando now well aware that he had to cover about 30 kms on foot for the next two days. The commandos kept close to the Teknyo Sao rivulet to reach the target.

    The journey was not easy as they carried a bag that weighed at least 30 kg and had to cover some 30 kms of unknown terrain that was mostly thick jungle, through the night of June 8 and into the early hours of June 9, with the estimated time of attack set for of 3.30 am.

    The only food that the Special Ops team had was dry rations that would last for a maximum of three days. Apart from keeping themselves hidden from the militants, they had to thresh through dense forest, aware that any false move could attract not just enemy fire but wild animals and worst of all, leeches.

    Movement was severely restricted during the day, to avoid attracting attention. At night, the commandos moved through the darkness, crossing the forested hills and picking their way through the rivers with one eye on the time.

    A chance Myanmarese insider was to prove their best informant. After trekking almost continuously for nearly 48 hours, once the commandos crossed into Myanmar, the soldiers finally closed in on the enemy camp. It was 2.30 am on June 9. The local villager explained the tricky terrain and showed them the safest route to the enemy camp. The enemy camp was situated 3 kms inside Myanmar border. Around 3.30 am on June 9, the commandos had the the enemy camp encircled, the 15 huts in their gunsights as they opened fire. The terrorists, sleeping inside the camp had no inkling that the Indian armed forces would launch an attack deep inside the Myanmar border, said the subedar.

    The firing lasted for just about 15-20 minutes. “All the terrorists were killed and the huts destroyed by our Indian commandos,” he said. The team used the guns, rocket launchers and explosives that they had brought with them. Some of the militants who tried to fire were killed before they could pull the trigger.

    “We caught them completely by surprise. Within minutes of laying waste to the camp, we retraced our steps and embarked on the nine-km trek back on foot. The most difficult 9 kms, really. As we had walked in water for several hours, our skin was damp and we had all sustained multiple abrasions along the way, along with the small wounds caused by leeches,” the subedar said.

    “But yes, none of that seemed to matter. We had had the satisfaction of flushing out the militants who killed our brothers in Manipur,” said Raghupathi. “We are proud of of having been part of the first permitted cross-border operation.”

    Bharathi, who is happy about her husband’s participation in the operation, has no qualms in admitting her fears and concern for Raghupathi’s safety. “I am happy that he was part of this operation. But we have seen the militants attacking jawans and armed forces in the Northeast and that makes me very concerned about him. However, I never voice my fears to him aloud as he does not like me being scared. He has been part of several such operations and I am proud of him,” Bharathi said. The family has a small arecanut plantation in Mandekolu village.

    While they were sleeping... | The Asian Age
 
OMG..........using US terminology is not going to make you a supa powa, come back to mother earth and watch out lest you step on some freshly throttled out signature indian pile of stinking dump

But still the fact remains if someone hurts us, we are going to hurt them back even more. You dont need to be a super power to do that.
 
The Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of the People’s Republic of China, Mr. Zhang Dejiang calls on the Prime Minister, Shri Narendra Modi, in New Delhi on June 15, 2015.
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Some interesting facts regarding the North East talks.


The tortuous road to Naga peace - The Hindu
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Newly recruited young Naga boys with their automatic weapons during the 33rd Republic Day celebration of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isak-Muivah) in Nagaland on March 21, 2012. — File Photo: Ritu Raj Konwar

Since the leaders of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim (Isaac-Muivah) (NSCN), Thuingaleng Muivah and Issac Chisi Swu, signed the ceasefire with the H.D. Deve Gowda government in 1997 and started negotiations, the peace talks have gone on and on, with round after round of inconclusive negotiations. There were suggestions recently that a final solution might be in sight and that may have provoked those left out of the process into striking back. But the secrecy shrouding the Naga peace process only complicates it further and makes it difficult to speculate on when there will be an end to India’s longest running ethnic insurrection.

Dialogue and division

The sheer duration of these negotiations does point to the complexities involved in trying to settle the Naga insurgency, but many critics of the Indian decision-making process have also suggested that New Delhi is trying to wear down the rebel leaders in a battle of attrition since the limited tactical advantages of keeping the Naga rebels off the battlefield have been achieved by the ceasefire. Some have also said that the ceasefire and the political dialogue have helped India further divide the Naga rebels, pointing to the talks with the Muivah faction and the refusal to talk with the Khaplang faction despite a ceasefire with his group. That, many would say, is what finally provoked Khaplang, a warlord, to renege on the ceasefire and form the rebel coalition, the United National Liberation Front of West South East Asia (UNLFWSEA), with motley rebel factions like the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) (Independent), the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) (Songjibit) and the KLA (Jibon).

Like Khaplang’s faction, these other groups are splinters of the original movements. Their factional rivals are already talking to India and New Delhi treats them as principals. These rebel chieftains who are holed up in the remote jungles of Myanmar’s Sagaing division are treated as marginals. Khaplang was under pressure for the last few years from New Delhi for providing shelter to these other Northeast Indian rebel groups. Home Ministry mandarins insist that this was a breach of trust on the part of Khaplang. But in the 1990s, former Home Minister L.K. Advani had clearly said that Khaplang is a Myanmarese national and that India cannot negotiate with him. While that is a valid position if one were to go by legalese, how can one expect Khaplang to just maintain a ceasefire when he knows that New Delhi will never call him for talks, let alone treat him as an equal to Muivah and Issac? On the other hand, the Myanmarese Naga rebel leader has seen his Indian Naga comrades break away to form splinter groups with whom India has promptly signed or negotiated a ceasefire. First it was Khole Konyak and Khitovi Zhimomi; now it is Wangting and Thikhak. The first faction calls itself NSCN (K-K), while the second calls itself NSCN (Reformation). These factions may now be offered to accept a deal India may have finalised with the Muivah-Issac group in an attempt to make it look like a settlement with all NSCN factions who represent “Indian Nagas”.

Sending out a message

Khaplang on the warpath again
is partly dictated by his urge to end his isolation in the jungles of Myanmar, if only to remind New Delhi that he cannot be ignored — a point he seeks to make by getting together all those in the Northeast who still intend to fight India. His one-time comrades, Wangting and Thikhak, blame Paresh Barua, an activist with ULFA, for “manipulating” Khaplang into reneging on the ceasefire. Barua has steadfastly remained on a separatist course even after the ULFA was decimated in Bangladesh after a crackdown by the Sheikh Hasina government and by periodic desertions. So, though the ULFA of today is not much of a fighting force, its leader emerges as the glue for a rebel coalition in Myanmar’s jungles because of his track record of leading an armed struggle through unending adversity. The other factions which have joined up with Khaplang in UNLFWSEA are also motley groups capable of occasional hits here and there. But it is the “working relations” of UNLFWSEA with the powerful Meitei rebel groups like the United National Liberation Front (UNLF) and the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) (who have not joined Khaplang’s coalition) that makes the anti-India platform in Myanmar’s jungles such a worrying proposition for New Delhi. Khaplang’s faction admitted in the post-June 4 ambush press release that the other two Meitei groups, KYKL and KCP, had joined his fighters to pull off the ambush in Chandel.

Missing the big picture

So, the real failure of Indian intelligence was not in predicting the possible spot of the ambush but in anticipating the emergence of a rebel coalition in the jungles of Myanmar. The first step in that direction was taken by Khaplang when he signed a truce with Myanmar’s Thein Sein government, one of the 14 rebel groups in Myanmar to strike a ceasefire deal with it. Having secured that ceasefire, Khaplang has ensured that his bases in Sagaing will be protected from the occasional raids by the Tatmadaw (Myanmar Army). Even after the attacks on Indian forces by Khaplang’s fighters in the last two months, the Myanmar government has not broken off the truce with his faction. For the Myanmarese Army which has to battle half-a-dozen powerful home-grown insurgencies at any given point of time, tackling the Kachin or the Kokang guerrillas is a bigger priority, not Khaplang. After the June 9 raid by India, Paresh Barua reiterated that his rebel coalition had “not faced any problems in Myanmar so far”. The second phase of forming that coalition was in extensive negotiations between the constituents. Now, reports about these negotiations have been trickling out of Myanmar off and on. They have been reported in the Northeast Indian media but not picked by the big media guns in faraway Delhi. This is what Indian intelligence seems to have largely missed out. The way the fighters of Khaplang slowly trickled out of their Indian camps in the rundown to the breakdown of the ceasefire was completely missed, despite alerts sounded to Indian intelligence by factional rivals. Then came the actual breakdown of the ceasefire but New Delhi was not concerned because it felt the Myanmarese Naga rebel leader had been isolated and confined to his lair in the jungles of Myanmar. They underestimated his strike power on Indian soil.

The Indian response

The Indian reply after the rebel violence has also been hasty and ill-conceived. The Indian Army was under pressure from top decision makers to hit back immediately, to make a political point of a “strong India which will not tolerate terrorism”. The Indian Army chief, General Dalbir Singh Suhag, was keen on striking back, but after careful planning. Under pressure, all that he could do was to plan two hits on rebel bases on the border or slightly inside it. These locations were chosen not because they had a lot of rebel fighters but because these were rebel bases and could be hit with smaller forces to make a political point that India will go after its enemies. The raids have made much less of an actual impact than was initially suggested by an gung-ho media, joined by a battery of retired soldiers and security officials baying for rebel blood.


The Nagaland Chief Minister, T.R. Zeliang, made a telling point in a recent interview when he said that the Centre has never kept his government in the picture over the breakdown of the ceasefire with Khaplang. Mr. Zeliang said it was possible to have reasoned with Khaplang through Naga civil society against breaking off the ceasefire. After 60 years of brutal conflict, the Nagas have got used to the peace dividend since 1997. Naga civil society groups, which have grown in stature, have ensured that the rebels do not go back to the jungles even if they were upset with the long, unending negotiations with India. Mr. Zeliang thus made a telling point — using the doves of peace to fight the dogs of war. But involving the States in the complex peace negotiations like those with the Naga rebel factions is yet to become a feature of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “cooperative federalism”. He is yet to get over the hush-hush hangover of his Congress predecessors when it comes to peacemaking with underground rebel groups. As the leaks after the transborder raids into Myanmar seem to indicate, the government is keen on greater secrecy in peacemaking than in war-making.

(Subir Bhaumik, a former BBC Correspondent, is the author of the books on the Northeast, Insurgent Crossfire and Troubled Periphery.)


S S Khaplang, the head of the National Socialist Council of Nagaland-Khaplang (NSCN-K), returning to his camp in Myanmar's Sagaing Division
 
NDFB(S) joins hands with UNLFW | Zee News
Last Updated: Sunday, June 21, 2015 - 18:51

Guwahati: In bad news for security forces, Bodo insurgent group NDFB(S) is believed to have aligned with UNLFW, an umbrella organisation of terror groups in the north-east, responsible for the recent ambush in Manipur that killed 18 soldiers.

Intelligence inputs suggest that Army's continued operations in difficult and inaccessible jungles of Chirang District in Assam have forced the The National Democratic Front of Bodoland (Songbijit) terrorists to flee from their hideouts.

The operation was intensified after over 70 people were killed in various attacks by NDFB(S) last year.

The Army has apprehended or neutralised several members of the insurgent group.

"Due to this fact, the NDFB(S) has aligned itself with UNLFW, an umbrella organisation of North East terrorist groups, which is likely to boost the group's sustenance," Army sources said.

The Army had this week arrested a top member of NDFB(S) Central Council from Tukrajhar, Chirang District, in a joint operation with Assam police.

The individual, who was identified as Sumanta Basumatary was the Joint Secretary (Home) of newly-formed Central Council of NDFB(S) and a Bhutan-trained terrorist.

The Central Council has 23 members. His responsibility included coordination of terrorist activities, internal discipline, media interaction and propaganda, the sources said.

Basumatary was very close to the outfit's new Vice President G Bidai and is believed to be the "brain" behind the killing of adivasis on December 23, 2014 in Kokrajhar district.

Thereafter, he fled to Bangalore and had recently returned to Chirang, the sources said, adding his arrest is a major blow to NDFB(S).

Follwing his arrest, the Army had also apprehended a female cadre of the group.

PTI

 

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