Army hunts for Manipur killers, NIA to probe

President says attacks on security forces performing their duty must be put down with a firm hand

Imphal, June 5: The army on Friday stepped up its hunt in Manipur for militants who massacred 18 soldiers, as the army chief, General Dalbir Singh Suhag, took stock of the situation.

Soldiers fanned out in Chandel district - where the audacious ambush occurred - and other parts of the state bordering Myanmar following the worst attack on the army in 30 years that also injured 11 soldiers.

The army deployment along the India-Myanmar border was also stepped up, official sources said.

Gen. Suhag reviewed the situation with senior army commanders in the state and Manipur Police officials. He also flew over the mountainous area where the ambush took place.

Although the army did not reveal what was discussed, military sources said there would be some changes in the operatiol tactics against the militants now.

The Thursday massacre is being viewed as a major intelligence failure. Sources in the home ministry in New Delhi told IANS that the tiol Investigation Agency (NIA) was likely to probe the ambush.

The tiol Socialist Council of galand-K led by its chairman S.S. Khaplang on Thursday claimed responsibility for the killings along with the Kanglei Yawol Kan Lup (KYKL) and the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP).

The militants, said to number around 50, reportedly came in from their camps in Myanmar and returned after the massacre.

“The militants must have sneaked back into Myanmar after the attack,” said a senior army official based in Imphal.

The NSCN faction on Friday said it lost one of its commanders in the ambush.

Army officials said the militants used rocket-propelled gredes and detoted an IED to attack the army convoy besides firing indiscrimitely with sophisticated weapons.

Unlike the Indian boundary with Pakistan and Bangladesh, India and Myanmar share an unfenced 1,643 km of border and permit a “free movement” regime upto 16 km on either side.

The attack was the worst on the army in more than three decades.

Those injured were flown to the Leimakhong military hospital near Imphal while reinforcements were rushed to the area for combing operations.

There has lately been a surge in such attacks in northeastern states like galand, Aruchal Pradesh and Manipur, particularly after the NSCN-K abrogated its ceasefire pact with the Indian government in March.

On April 2, three soldiers were killed in an ambush by the NSCN-K in Aruchal Pradesh’s Tirap district.

On May 3, seven Assam Rifles troopers and a Territorial Army soldier were killed in another ambush in galand’s Mon district by the newly-floated United Liberation Front of Western South East Asia comprising the NSCN-K, ULFA, Kamatapur Liberation Organisation and NDFB-Songbijit.

Meanwhile, President Prab Mukherjee has strongly condemned the terror attack.

In his message to the army chief, the President has said, “I am extremely sad to learn about the terror attack of yesterday in which a number of army personnel lost their lives and several were injured in Manipur’s Chandel district. Such random attacks on security forces performing their duty must be put down with a firm hand. I call upon all authorities concerned to work in close concert to bring the perpetrators of this heinous attack to justice and to maintain law and order in the state of Manipur.”

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