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SOUTH ASIA INTELLIGENCE REVIEW
Weekly Assessments & Briefings
Volume 11, No. 37, March 19, 2013

Data and assessments from SAIR can be freely published in any form with credit to the South Asia Intelligence Review of the
South Asia Terrorism Portal


ASSESSMENT


INDIA
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An Enveloping Blindness
Ajai Sahni
Editor, SAIR; Executive Director, ICM & SATP

It is true that our enemies have weakened – some temporarily, some more permanently; but it would be wrong to believe that we have become significantly stronger.

For the first time since 1994, the year 2012 registered a total number of terrorism and insurgency linked fatalities across India in the three digits – at 804, as against 1,073 in 2011 and a peak of 5,839 in 2001. The trend of sustained decline in such fatalities has been near-unbroken since 2001 (with a marginal reversal in 2008), giving tremendous relief to theatres of persistent violence. The most prominent among these is Jammu and Kashmir (J&K), which has been wracked by a Pakistan-backed Islamist terrorist movement since 1988, with a resultant total of 43,439 fatalities (till March 10, 2013). J&K recorded 117 fatalities in 2012, down from 183 in 2011; and a peak of 4,507 in 2001.

Pakistan-backed Islamist terrorist attacks outside J&K also registered a remarkable drop, with just one incident – a low intensity blast in Pune (Maharashtra) on August 1, with no fatalities – recorded through 2012. Forty two such fatalities had occurred in four incidents in 2011, , and a recent peak of 364 killed in seven incidents in 2008.

No incident of suspected Hindutva terrorism has occurred since 2008, though two extremists were arrested in 2012 on charges of involvement in earlier incidents – the 2006 Malegaon bombing which left 40 dead.

The Maoist insurgency, which had surged after the unification of the erstwhile People’s War Group (PWG) and the Maoist Communist Centre (MCC) in September 2004, and had come to be regarded as the country’s ‘gravest internal security threat’, has also witnessed a dramatic decline in violence and fatalities. From a peak of 1,080 fatalities recorded in 2010, there was a near-halving, to 602 in 2011, and a further and substantial drop to 367 in 2012.

Bucking these trends, however, India’s troubled Northeast saw fatalities rising to 317 in 2012, from 246 in 2011. While this is natural cause for concern, it is useful to recall that the region recorded 1,051 fatalities in 2008, and has seen a continuous decline in insurgency-related killings since. The recent reversal in this trend is substantially the result of an escalation in fratricidal killings between various insurgent formations, particularly in Nagaland and Manipur . Of the 61 fatalities recorded in Nagaland, 55 were of insurgent cadres of various formations, all killed in internecine violence. The remaining six killed were civilians. No Security Force (SF) fatalities have been recorded in Nagaland since 2008. In Manipur, 74 of 111 fatalities in 2012 are of insurgent cadres, of which 25 were killed in fratricidal conflicts, and the remaining 49 by SFs. Twelve SF personnel and 25 civilians also lost their lives. Meghalaya also saw a surge in militant activities, with 48 killed in 2012 – including 19 insurgents, 27 civilians and two SF personnel – up from 29 killed in 2011, including eight insurgents, 11 civilians and 10 SF personnel.

Nevertheless, the broadly declining trends in a preponderance of the theatres of chronic violence in India have brought succour to many, and encouraged others to believe that the worst is over, and that the state, finally, has got its act together.  Clearly, if all the insurgencies in the country – including those that have long enjoyed external state support – are now crashing into (apparently) imminent oblivion, the Government must have done something right.

However, on March 13, 2013, a suicide attack on a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camp at Bemina in Srinagar (J&K) killed five CRPF personnel and two terrorists. On February 21, 2013, twin explosions in Hyderabad by suspected Islamist terrorists killed 17 persons. On January 7, 2013, the Maoists killed 16 CRPF troopers (two Maoists were also killed in the incident); and to add the element of the bizarre, stitched explosives into the abdomens of two dead troopers. Then, on February 2, 2013, Garo National Liberation Army (GNLA) militants stormed Williamnagar District Jail in the East Garo Hills District in the Northeastern State of Meghalaya, and shot dead the Assistant Jailor and injured a Warden, who later succumbed to his injuries.

These incidents, among several other ‘lesser’ occurrences, are sharp reminders that India’s vulnerabilities remain intact. Indeed, the declining trends in terrorism and insurgency are the consequence of a range of factors substantially independent of state policy, linked to the broader global environment of the declining ‘tolerance of terror’; the preoccupation of our enemies with other theatres – particularly Pakistan’s currently more urgent priorities in Afghanistan; a tactical hiatus imposed by certain insurgent formations – particularly the Maoists; changing policies of some of our neighbours – most prominently Bangladesh; and in some cases – particularly the many groups in the Northeast – the sheer attrition of time and exhaustion.

Such an assessment may appear churlish in denying due credit to the security establishment and apparatus for the sustained gains registered over the past 12 years. It is not the case, moreover, that operational successes have been lacking. Since the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, for instance, at least 626 persons involved in Islamist extremism, particularly including Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT) militants and Students Islamic Movement of India – Indian Mujahideen (SIMI-IM) cadres and Pakistani nationals, have been arrested. However, such operational successes are entirely consistent with the past, at times when little or no relief from the threat of Islamist terrorism was visible, and, indeed, even during phases when the situation was worsening sharply. The correlation between operational successes and security gains is complex, and a range of other factors need to be assessed to arrive at a clear picture.

It is significant, within the context of Islamist terrorism, for instance, that operational successes have themselves exposed an expanding network of Pakistan-backed groupings into areas hitherto regarded as relatively unaffected by their activities. Between August 29 and September 2, 2012, Police arrested at least 18 persons across Karnataka, Maharashtra and Andhra Pradesh, and claimed to have dismantled terror modules linked to the LeT and Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami ( HuJI). Significantly, at that time, the then Director Intelligence Bureau, Nehchal Sandhu, had underlined the fact that groups such as HuJI and Indian Mujahideen had developed a formidable complex in Southern India through the SIMI network. Similarly, the arrest of Abu Jundal aka Zabiuddin Ansari, the prime handler of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, on June 21, 2012, on his deportation from Saudi Arabia was another major success; as were the following deportations and arrests of A. Raees on October 6, 2012, who was linked with a consignment of explosives seized in Malayalamkunnu in Kerala in 2009; and Fasih Mohammad on October 22, 2012, a suspect in the Chinnaswamy Stadium blast in Bangalore, on April 17, 2010, and the Jama Masjid shooting on September 19, 2010. However, evidence emerging from their interrogations exposed the degree to which Saudi Arabia had been consolidated by the Pakistan intelligence and terrorist apparatus as an operational hub for terrorist recruitment and coordination of operations against India. Earlier, substantial evidence had already been amassed demonstrating the degree to which Saudi Arabia was being used for funding the subversive-terrorist SIMI-IM complex in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra.

It is useful, here, to recall that 252 of the country’s 640 Districts continued to be afflicted by varying intensities of chronic subversive, insurgent and terrorist activity in 2012, including 173 Districts where the Maoists remained active; 15 Districts in J&K afflicted by Pakistan-backed Islamist separatist terrorism; and 64 Districts in six Northeastern States where numerous ethnicity based terrorist and insurgent formations operate. This is, of course, down from a peak of 310 Districts so listed in 2010, principally as a result of the abrupt contraction of the Maoist rampage which had escalated enormously in the 2009-10 period. Maoist violence and activities have diminished partly as a result of severe losses at leadership level that resulted from their over-ambitious and premature plan to “extend the people’s war throughout the country”, and particularly their forays into urban areas; and partly because opportunities created by the perverse pre-election politics of West Bengal – where the Trinamool Congress (TMC), then in the Opposition, colluded with the Maoists in its successful bid to unseat the then-ruling Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) – ended with the new TMC Government discovering that a collusive arrangement between a Government and a rebel formation was not sustainable. It is crucial to note, here, that the Maoists have, essentially, withdrawn to their areas of traditional strength in the so-called ‘Red Corridor’ States, and that the overwhelming proportion of their leadership losses were sustained in narrowly targeted intelligence-led operations far from their ‘heartland’, and not in the blundering ‘clear, hold and develop’ or ‘cordon and search’ operations that much noise has been made about. Indeed, 2012 estimates of Maoist armed cadres indicated further strengthening, at 8,600, as against 7,200 armed cadres in 2006; an additional strength of 38,000 ‘jan (people’s) militia’ and unnumbered ‘sympathisers’ back the ‘full time revolutionaries’ of the People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA).

Despite the demonstrable success of intelligence-based operations against the Maoists and the evident necessity of the dominance of the State Police apparatus throughout its jurisdiction, the lessons the Centre and many of the States have ‘learned’ are both counter-intuitive and counter-productive. Inordinate emphasis continues to be placed on the raising and training of Special Forces, despite the demonstrable necessity of improving general Force and intelligence capabilities at State level. Indeed, in a complete misreading of the experience of the successful anti-Naxalite campaign in Andhra Pradesh, the Centre is now funding a scheme for the raising of Special Forces in the worst afflicted States – Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha and Bihar – “as per the approved guidelines of Greyhounds”. Meanwhile, the general policing apparatus in these States remains largely dysfunctional and divorced from the challenge of the Maoist insurgency, even as a comprehensive failure to develop effective intelligence capabilities hobbles operations by both Central Forces and the States’ special and ‘commando’ units.

While flashy technological acquisitions and ‘architectural’ innovations and proposals are paraded by the political executive as ‘solutions’ to the challenges of insurgency and terrorism, the hard core of capacities and capabilities continues to be substantially neglected. Many of the most important initiatives continue to founder, often due to the structural inflexibility of the existing system, and significantly because of the sheer dearth of an appropriate profile of manpower. According to a statement in the Lok Sabha (Lower House of Parliament) by the Minister of State of Home Affairs, R.P.N. Singh, on August 16, 2011, a total of 9,443 posts were lying vacant in the Intelligence Bureau (IB). The situation has improved, at best, marginally, since then. On March 12, 2013, in a written statement to the Lok Sabha, Singh disclosed, “As against a sanctioned strength of 26,867 personnel in IB, at present 18,795 personnel are available with a total of 8,072 vacancies (30%).”

The statement speaks volumes of the disarray in the national intelligence establishment. For one thing, a total sanctioned strength of just 26,867 personnel (including an undisclosed proportion of staff unrelated to the principal tasks of intelligence gathering, analysis and operations) for an organisation with as wide a mandate as the IB, and for a population of 1.24 billion is, in itself, an absurdity. That a 30 per cent deficit exists against even this meagre allocation of manpower is utterly inexplicable, particularly within a context where the Centre is pretending that it has the capacities to set up a National Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC) ‘like the US NCTC’. The sheer stupidity of the national approach to counter-terrorism (CT) in general, and to CT intelligence in particular, is abundantly manifested in this single snapshot of the Centre’s scandalous approach.

India’s capacity for self-deception is extreme, and this constitutes the gravest threat to national security. The state’s counterterrorism (CT) ‘policies’ have been based principally on political posturing, and not on objective and urgent considerations of strategy and response. Over the past years, and sharply since the 26/11 Mumbai attacks of 2008, creating an illusion of security has been given far greater priority than giving real muscle and substance to the CT apparatus. Flashy, superficially imitative and wasteful initiatives such as the National Investigation Agency (NIA) and the National Counter-terrorism Centre (NCTC) have been projected as panacea in an atmosphere of hysteria that follows major terrorist strikes, and have unfortunately captured the imagination of the political leadership, the media and the public, with very rare individual exceptions. No objective assessment of the utility of such institutions, given the actual profile they can be expected to attain within the Indian context, has been forthcoming. The obtuse narrative advanced by camp followers at the Centre and lapped up by the opposition, the media, and the public, for instance, is that 9/11 occurred in the US; then the US created the NCTC; and there has been no incident of domestic terrorism in the US since. This narrative is false at every level National Confusion on Counter-terrorism], and yet, it constitutes virtually the sum of the rationale advanced for the creation of the NCTC in India. That the US has spent trillions of dollars on virtually reinventing its domestic intelligence, CT and security apparatus; launched two wars; hunted down and killed terrorists across the world; located and executed Osama bin Laden in the heart of a military cantonment 192 kilometres inside Pakistan; and virtually violated every principal of its own Constitution and international law to detain and torture suspects and enter into unprincipled ‘rendition’ treaties with a multiplicity of regimes notorious for human rights violations, is entirely missing from this narrative. That we cannot, or in many of these elements may not wish to, do most of these things is also entirely ignored. But our NCTC will be ‘like the US NCTC’, just as our National Investigation Agency (NIA), with a 2011-12 budget of USD12.53 million, was intended to be ‘like the FBI’, which had a 2012 budget of over USD 8 billion, seems to be an entirely acceptable proposition to the many ‘blind men of Hindoostan’.

In the meantime, essential institutional capabilities – most importantly the Multi-Agency Centre (MAC) and the national database it was intended to create, and the Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS) – fail to attain the critical mass necessary to impact on the country’s operational capabilities. The Police-population ratio, repeatedly falsified by the Home Ministry in statements to Parliament, has barely crept up from 128 in 2008, to a severely inadequate 137 as on December 31, 2011. By most objective measures – with the exception of the unwarranted emphasis on Special Force capabilities – broader Police capabilities and the efficiency of the security system as a whole have not manifested any dramatic improvement, and each new crisis exposes vulnerabilities that are no different from those that disgraced India during the 26/11 attacks in 2008.

It would be a grave error to take declining trends in terrorist and insurgent violence in India as proof that we are now proportionately more secure against these threats. India’s vulnerabilities have not diminished, though her enemies’ strategic priorities may have temporarily shifted, or their energies or motivation may have flagged. The substructure of enveloping factors – mis-governance, corruption, abysmal poverty, rising demographic stresses, a hostile neighbourhood, and global instability – remain unchanged, and will yield new cycles of future violence. The limited relief India is currently experiencing offers a brief opportunity to strengthen our systems and to enhance our capabilities, so that we are better prepared for what might well be an even more devastating phases of violence in future.

NEPAL
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Patchwork Solutions
Fakir Mohan Pradhan
Research Associate, Institute for Conflict Management

Bringing an end to the prolonged political deadlock over the formation of a consensus government before holding fresh election for the Constitutional Assembly (CA), the four major Political formations in Nepal – the Unified Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (UCPN-M), Nepali Congress (NC), Communist Party of Nepal-Unified Marxist Leninist (CPN-UML) and the United Democratic Madhesi Front (UDMF) – finally signed an 11-point Agreement on March 13, 2013, to form an Election Government under the leadership of the incumbent Chief Justice (CJ) Khil Raj Regmi. The next day (March 14), Justice Regmi took oath as the ‘Chairperson of the Interim Election Council of Ministers’ who ‘shall carry out all the functions and tasks of the Prime Minister (PM) as mentioned in the Constitution’. Other members of the Council (a maximum of 11, including the Chairperson), who shall be appointed from former distinguished class civil service officers of the Government of Nepal, would discharge their function as the council of ministers. Earlier, President Ram Baran Yadav had cleared a 25-point ordinance to remove (constitutional) difficulties for the Election Government and the election. 

According to the Agreement, the primary task of the Election Government or the Interim Election Council will be to hold elections to the Constituent Assembly (CA) within the stipulated time, i.e., by June 21, 2013. If the CA-Parliament elections cannot take place by June 21, 2013, due to technical causes or an intractable situation, the Council of Ministers shall fix the date for holding the election by December 15, 2013, based on a consensus of the 'high-level political mechanism' (HLPM).  

The Chief Justice shall return to his previous post following the nomination of the next PM and the tenure of the Council would come to an end. In the mean time, all the tasks of the CJ will be carried out by the Acting CJ.

The Election Government would not carry out any task of long-term nature. Further, a ‘high-level political mechanism’ (HLPM), with the representation of major parties, would be formed to assist the Government in its activities, in accordance with the spirit of the Joint People’s Movement, political consensus and cooperation, and to resolve possible problems in the political sector. The jurisdiction of the ‘mechanism’ – articulated through a Committee – includes providing necessary consent, feedback and consultation to the Election Government. Further, the Committee would work to create an atmosphere conducive to holding the election within the scheduled date and would recommend to the Council of Ministers the next date for fresh elections if the election cannot be held within the scheduled date due to an ‘intractable situation’.

The Agreement carefully navigates its way through contentious issues regarding the highest rank to be given to former Maoist combatants who joined Nepal Army, voters’ list, citizenship (certificates) and the truth and reconciliation commission, without raking up further controversies.

The Agreement between the ‘big four’ has, however, not gone down well with the fringe parties, including the hardline Mohan Baidya-led Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-Maoist Baidya), which split from the UCPN-M on June 19, 2012 . At least 22 fringe parties have taken to the streets to protest against the 11-point Agreement. Indeed, even a considerable section of members of CPN-UML and NC are said to be against the Agreement. The Nepal Bar Association (NBA) has vehemently opposed the arrangement, claiming it compromises the basic democratic principle of separation of powers between the Executive and the Judiciary. Petitions challenging the arrangement of the CJ leading the Election Government have already been submitted before the Supreme Court.

A seemingly workable arrangement to break the protracted deadlock has already run into numerous difficulties. When the ‘big four’ first agreed to have a CJ-led government, the CJ expressed his ‘reservations’. After intense parleys for nearly a month, and a reported assurance that the CJ would not be removed from the post even if the Election Council fails to conduct election by December 15, the CJ agreed to the arrangement. Interestingly, the Agreement is silent on what would happen if election is not conducted by December 15. Further, in the time period between the proposal to make the CJ the head of Election Government and the CJ’s acceptance of the offer – the phase during which he was negotiating terms with the political leaders – he is said to have promised, on grounds of propriety, not to interfere in the constitution of benches that would decide the petitions challenging the arrangement. He has, however, been instrumental in constitution of at least some of the said benches. More controversially, he accepted the offer to lead the Election Government when one of the petitions challenging this move remained sub judice.

Further, the interim Election Council appears to be an arrangement intended to avoid accountability by the political class. Though the chairman and the ministers would purportedly function as the PM and the Council of Ministers, the HLPM retains all powers through the mandate to ‘assist the government’. If this was not sufficiently explicit, the Agreement further provides that it will be in the jurisdiction of the HLPM to provide necessary ‘consent, feedback and consultation’ to the Election Government. The filling up of constitutional posts and appointments of the ambassadors (except from the Foreign Affairs service) can also be done only with the ‘agreement’ of the HLPM.

It is already clear that the schedule to hold the election before June 21 is wildly optimistic, despite the hope expressed by the Election Commission (EC) on March 15 that meeting the deadline could be possible if preparations are made without delay. Earlier, speaking at a programme titled 'Constitutional Crisis and Necessity of Election' in the Capital on February 3, 2013, former Election Commissioner Bhojraj Pokharel had declared, "Let's not talk about holding election in May. Election is possible only in November now." Strangely, the 25-point ordinance removing constitutional difficulties does not include several provisions recommended by the EC, including the proposal that the EC be granted the power to mobilize security personnel for elections and to punish poll officials for breach of discipline. In fact, the Baburam Bhattarai-led Cabinet had failed to forward these proposals to the President.

Moreover, none of the political parties, with the possible exception of UCPN-M, are prepared to go to the polls if elections are held around or before June 21. The Maoists are sitting pretty as the UCPN-M is now the richest political party, thanks to the stipend given to People’s Liberation Army (PLA) combatants staying in cantonments and the voluntary retirement and rehabilitation packages option offered to them, during the Army Integration process. Moreover, the presence of the NC and CPN-UML in the hinterland cannot match the Maoists, even as the Maoists’ capacity for street mobilization (and violence) remains unequalled.

The reality is that the Maoists have been loading the dice for a long time now. They had demanded the integration of 19,602 PLA combatants, but agreed to just 6,500, and, eventually, only 1,462 were found eligible to join the Nepal Army. Despite agreeing to an NC-led Election Government in May 2012, Bhattarai remained in the Prime Minister’s chair, knowing well that the music was going to stop. Indeed, the Maoists have gone back on most of the promises they made in various agreements with the other parties over time.

Meanwhile, the ‘big four’ on March 16 have constituted the proposed HLPM. According to the understanding, each party would lead the ‘mechanism’ for a month, on rotation basis, starting with UCPN-M Chairman, Pushpa Kamal Dahal, followed by NC President Sushil Koirala, CPN-UML Chairman Jhalanath Khanal and UDMF Coordinator Bijaya Kumar Gachchhadar, in that order.  

The11-point agreement appears to have broken through a four month deadlock, and to offer hopes of a new election and Constituent Assembly. However, given the record of the political parties, these outcomes remain uncertain. With the overwhelming proportion of powers concentrated in the HLPM, and the fractious relations between its constituents, there is little reason to believe that the term of the Election Government will be smooth and will culminate in ordered elections, possibly in June and certainly before December. Indeed, the principal political parties arrived at the 11-point agreement, not on the basis of a consensual understanding on major issues, but rather due to their individual and divergent interests. The NC and CPN-UML sought an end to the Bhattarai Government, and could secure no other outcome, having failed to establish the NC-led Election Government earlier agreed on. The Maoists, on the other hand, have already consolidated their strengths and exercise enormous power within any administrative arrangement, including the dispensation under the current Agreement. The coming months are, consequently, certain to see ugly confrontations in the HLPM, as each party seeks to maneuver to its own advantage. Indeed, despite appearances, the circumstances that led to the deadlock of the past months persist, and may even be amplified by the unfinished compromises of the HLPM – Election Government setup.


NEWS BRIEFS

Weekly Fatalities: Major Conflicts in South Asia
March 11-17, 2013

 

Civilians

Security Force Personnel

Terrorists/Insurgents

Total

INDIA

 

Jammu and Kashmir

0
5
2
7

Manipur

0
1
0
1

Left-wing Extremism

 

Chhattisgarh

1
1
0
2

Jharkhand

7
1
2
10

Odisha

0
0
1
1

Total (INDIA)

8
8
5
21

PAKISTAN

 

Balochistan

5
0
0
5

FATA

0
3
36
39

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

5
1
0
6

Sindh

33
5
1
39

Total (PAKISTAN)

44
9
37
90
Provisional data compiled from English language media sources.


INDIA

Five CRPF troopers and two terrorists killed in suicide attack on CRPF camp in Srinagar in Jammu and Kashmir: Two fidayeen (suicide attackers) in the morning of March 13 stormed a Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) camp in Bemina area of the Srinagar city (Srinagar District), killing five troopers and injuring 10 others, including seven troopers and three civilians. The two terrorists, who carried out the attack, were also killed. Though Hizb-ul-Mujahideen (HM) claimed responsibility for the attack, investigations so far indicate that the militants were of Pakistani origin and belonged to the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LeT). Times of India; Daily Excelsior, March 14-16, 2013.

3,794 Kashmiri militants living in Pakistan and PoK, says J&K Government: In a written reply to a question in Jammu and Kashmir (J&K) Legislative Assembly on March 11, the Government said that 3974 Kashmiri militants are still living in Pakistan and Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK). 241 ex-militants have returned but none through the identified routes under the policy and procedure for return of ex-militants notified by the State Government Vide Order No. Home-1376(ISA) of 2010 dated November 23, 2010, which means that the benefits under the Return and Rehabilitation Policy of the Government cannot be extended to these ex-militants. Daily Excelsior, March 12, 2013.

Insurgent groups in the Northeast are getting arms and ammunition from China, says Government: China may not be behind the unrest in the northeast, but insurgent groups in the region are getting arms and ammunition that country, the Government said on March 12. Union Minister of State for Home Affairs M Ramachandran replied with a "no" when asked whether the government has received information regarding assistance provided by China to separatist groups involved in large-scale violence that took place in the northeastern states in recent years. "However, there are reports that the insurgent groups operating in the north eastern states of India have been augmenting their armoury by acquiring arms from China and Sino-Myanmar border towns and routing them through Myanmar. There are no confirmed reports to suggest that the insurgent groups are receiving funds from China," he said in a written reply in Lok Sabha (Lower House of Parliament). Times of India, March 13, 2013.

Pakistan exported FICN worth INR 25 billion into India in 2012, reveals report: Senior Indian intelligence officials say that Pakistan-based operatives exported Fake Indian Currency Note (FICN) amounting INR 25 billion into India in 2012 alone to fund terror and illegal activities. Authorities estimate INR 16 billion worth of FICN was brought into India in 2010, a figure that rose to INR 20 billion in 2011. Though some of this was intercepted, it is only a small fraction of the total. In 2010 and 2011 respectively, INR 300 million and INR 450 million worth of counterfeit rupees were recovered. HindustanTimes , March 12, 2013.

Over 8,000 posts vacant in Intelligence Bureau, says Government: The Government said on March 12 that the Intelligence Bureau (IB) is facing shortage of over 8,000 personnel due to unavailability of suitable candidates among other reasons. "As against the sanctioned strength of 26,867 personnel in IB, at present 18,795 personnel are available with a total of 8,072 vacancies (30%)," Union Minister of State for Home Affairs R P N Singh told Lok Sabha (Lower House of Parliament) in a written reply. Times of India, March 13, 2013.

BKI in the UK trying to revive Sikh militancy, says Government: Outfits like Babbar Khalsa International (BKI) are trying to revive Sikh militancy, Government said on March 12 citing intelligence reports. "There are reports that some organisations like BKI in the UK are striving to revive Sikh militancy," Union Minister of State for Home Affairs R P N Singh told Lok Sabha (Lower House of Parliament) in a written reply, adding Government was keeping a close watch on their activities. "A close watch is maintained on the activities of various groups known to have been engaged in trying to foment terrorist activities in Punjab," the minister added. Times of India, March 13, 2013.

Violence claimed 1,989 lives since 1987 in Bodo areas of Assam: In a written reply, Forest Minister Rockybul Husain told the State Assembly on March 11 that a total of 1,989 people have died in violence by militants and miscreants in the present Bodoland Territorial Autonomous District (BTAD) areas since the movement for a separate State of Bodoland in 1987. Further, only one accused out of the 426 has so far been punished. The trial of 49 cases has been completed, resulting in the acquittal of 48 and the rest of the cases are pending. Assam Tribune, March 11, 2013.

Parliament rejects Pakistan's National Assembly resolution on Afzal Guru: Indian Parliament on March 15b taking strong exception of Pakistan's National Assembly's March 14 resolution, that condemned the February 9, 2013, execution of 2001 Parliament Attack case convict Mohammad Afzal Guru and demanded that his mortal remains be handed over to his family, rejected it out-rightly. The resolution in both the Houses, read: "This House totally rejects the Resolution passed by the National Assembly of Pakistan on March 14, 2013. The House notes that Pakistan has committed that it would not allow its territory to be used for terrorism against India and only fulfilment of this commitment can be the basis for peaceful relations with Pakistan." The resolution also reiterated that, "the entire State of Jammu and Kashmir, including the territory under illegal occupation of Pakistan, is and shall always be an integral part of India.". The Hindu, March 16, 2013.


NEPAL

Chief Justice Khil Raj Regmi sworn in as the head of the Interim Election Council: Chief Justice Khil Raj Regmi on March 14 was sworn in as the head of the Interim Election Council (election Government). Earlier, on March 13, leaders from the four major political forces signed an 11-point political agreement. The agreement stated that the new CA will have 491 members. Of these, 240 members will be elected under the first-past-the-post electoral system and 240 will be elected under proportional representative quotas while another 11 members will be nominated by the cabinet on the basis of political agreement. The agreement further said that the interim cabinet will not be allowed to take any decision that may have a long-term impact on the country. The non-partisan Government has been entrusted with the responsibility of conducting new CA elections by June 21, 2013. NepalNews, March 13-14, 2013.


PAKISTAN

36 militants and three Security Forces among 39 persons killed during the week in FATA: At least 20 militants were killed and another 20 were injured as fighting between the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Ansarul Islam (AI) outfit continued on March 14 in the Qambarkhel area of Tirah Valley in Bara tehsil (revenue unit) of Khyber Agency in Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).

At least 16 militants were killed and 12 others injured in clashes between TTP and AI in Maidan area of Tirah valley, tribal sources said on March 13.

At least three soldiers, including an officer, were killed in a roadside blast in Dogar area of Kurram Agency on March 11. Daily Times; Dawn; The News; Tribune; Central Asia Online; The Nation; The Frontier Post; Pakistan Today; Pakistan Observer, March 12-18, 2013.

Punjabi TTP 'chief' Asmatullah Muawiya warns of terror attacks in India: The 'chief' 'operational commander' of the al Qaeda linked Punjabi Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), Asmatullah Muawiya, on March 11 warned that India is set to become a major target of terrorist attacks once again, especially after the Allied Forces withdraw from Afghanistan. Muawiya's statement has been released on an al-Qaeda and TTP-linked jehadi website - Jamia Hafsa Urdu Forum. KashmirWatch, March 12, 2013.

Three British Muslims including a convert to Islam pleaded guilty in the court of London: Three British Muslims, including a convert to Islam pleaded guilty in court on March 15 to travelling to Pakistan for terror training. The charges said that they travelled to Pakistan for terror training, travelled abroad to commit acts of terrorism and provided information about travel to Pakistan, terrorism training and operational security while there. The three men were arrested in July 2011. Daily Times, March 16, 2013.

National Assembly passes resolution against Afzal Guru's hanging: The National Assembly on March 14 unanimously passed a resolution against the February 9, 2013, hanging of Afzal Guru (in New Delhi's Tihar Jail), convicted in December 13, 2001, attack on Indian Parliament and called upon the United Nations (UN) and the international community to 'help' Kashmiris and get their right to 'self-determination'. The resolution was moved by Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) chief and chairman Kashmir Committee Maulana Fazlur Rehman at the end of his farewell speech in the National Assembly. Dawn, March 15, 2013.


SRI LANKA

UNHRC adopts UPR on Sri Lanka: The United Nation Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on March 15 adopted the outcome of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) on Sri Lanka in Geneva. Sri Lanka's Special Envoy of the President on Human Rights Minister of Plantation Industries Mahinda Samarasinghe delivered a statement to the Council on Sri Lanka's progress in the promotion of human rights. ColomboPage, March 16, 2013.


The South Asia Intelligence Review (SAIR) is a weekly service that brings you regular data, assessments and news briefs on terrorism, insurgencies and sub-conventional warfare, on counter-terrorism responses and policies, as well as on related economic, political, and social issues, in the South Asian region.

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