Pakistan now smuggles weapons into Kashmir via Punjab

New Delhi: Since the global watchdog on terror funding, Financial Action Task Force (FATF) mounted pressure against the Imran Khan government, terror groups based in Pakistan have been smuggling weapons for their recruits in Kashmir via Punjab.

Top official sources told IANS that since the February 2019 Pulwama suicide attack, dozens of weapons en route Jammu and Kashmir, have been seized in Punjab. There has also been a rise in the Pakistan-originating Chinese drones dropping weapons and communication devices in Punjab following the abrogation of Jammu and Kashmir’s special status on August 5, last year.

Pakistan-based terror groups have sent at least eight drone sorties, air-dropping 80 kg of weapons in Punjab during the last few months, sources said.

“We have seized 15 AK-47s, 10 in Punjab in two separate cases and five at Lakhanpur border between Punjab and Jammu. Besides, we have also recovered dozens of pistols, ammunition, satellite phones, fake Indian currency notes (FICN) and hand grenades from these drone sorties in separate incidents since August 2019,” a top source said, adding that there may have been many occasions when the security forces were unable to intercept and seize the Pakistani arms consignment.

An official who did not want to be named said that the usage of drones for dropping arms was “scary” because Pakistan can smuggle anything from biological to chemical weapons into India using unmanned vehicles.

Earlier, terrorists were mostly infiltrating from the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu & Kashmir and would bring a large consignment of arms along. The LoC trade was another route for smuggling arms into Kashmir.

But after the NIA cracked down on terror groups and their support system in Kashmir and FATF tightened its noose around Pakistan, the strategy of banned terror groups like Jaish-e-Mohammad, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hizbul Mujahideen has changed, a source said.

“Given the scrutiny and conditions that Pakistani establishment is supposed to meet to get off the FATF’s ‘grey list’, they are now using alternative routes for cross-border terror,” another source said.

“They are now mostly infiltrating from the Jammu region and Punjab. But we don’t know exactly from where and we don’t know how many may have infiltrated through these routes in the last year. 60 militants have infiltrated in just the last two months, as per our intel reports,” a senior police official in Srinagar said. (IANS)

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