From fake PAN cards to forged passports: JK police unravel LeT's pan-India logistical web
The terrorists used forged documents & identities to create a network not just in Jammu & Kashmir, but in several other states.
PTI
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Officials said the accused aided terrorists by creating fake Aadhaar, PAN and voter ID documents for logistical support (PTI)
Srinagar/New Delhi, 12 April
Widening its crackdown on the inter-state network of the Lashkar-e-Taiba terror group, the Jammu and Kashmir Police, in coordination with central intelligence agencies, has detained several people from Haryana and Rajasthan for allegedly facilitating the acquisition of fraudulent identities, including passports, by terrorists.
Officials
said on Sunday that the detained persons provided critical logistical support
to terrorists by making documents like Aadhaar and Permanent Account Number
(PAN) cards, and even voter cards.
The
investigation was spearheaded by the Srinagar Police, which generated the
entire intelligence. As the scale of the operation and its broader security implications became clear, we immediately escalated the case to involve central agencies and police forces across other states to dismantle the
network spanning multiple areas of the country.
One of the
terrorists, identified as Umar alias 'Kharghosh' (rabbit), had managed to
procure a passport and has since fled to Indonesia, from where he is believed
to have used another forged travel document and stationed himself in a Gulf
country, the officials said.
Umar, a
resident of Karachi in Pakistan, had infiltrated into India after 2012 and fled
using the forged passport, procured from Jaipur in Rajasthan, in 2024, the
officials said.
These
details emerged after Srinagar police busted a "deep-rooted"
interstate LeT module and arrested five people, including a Pakistani
terrorist, Abdullah alias Abu Hureira, who had been on the run for 16 years and
had successfully established bases outside the Union Territory.
The arrest
of Abdullah, along with another Pakistani national, Usman alias Khubaib, was
another major success for Srinagar police that comes six months after the
dismantling of a "white-collar" terror cell centred at Faridabad's Al
Falah University that is linked to the November 2025 Red Fort blast case.
During
interrogation, Abdullah told his interrogators about his and Umar's footprints
across India, especially in Rajasthan, Haryana and Punjab, which included a
marriage ceremony solemnised by the escaped terrorists with the daughter of a
terror sympathiser in Kashmir, the officials said.
The
operation, which began on 31 March and was monitored by Director General of
Police Nalin Prabhat, who camped in Srinagar, has unveiled the funding and
financial pattern of the LeT, officials said.
The
terrorists used forged documents and identities to create a network not just in
Jammu and Kashmir, but in several other states, they added.
The
officials did not rule out the possibility of placing some of the detained
persons under arrest, especially those who helped in procuring the passports and
other documents fraudulently.
Three
Srinagar residents, identified as Mohammad Naqeeb Bhat, Adil Rashid Bhat, and
Ghulam Mohammad Mir alias Mama, were among the five arrested. They are accused
of providing shelter, food and logistical support to the terrorists.
The
elaborate network began to unravel on 31 March when the first of the three
Srinagar residents, Naqeeb Bhat, was arrested from Pandach along with a pistol
and other incriminating material.
During his
questioning, Bhat told the police that he was a part of the LeT and procured
the arms and ammunition from another associate, Adil Rashid of Zakoora and also
provided support to foreign terrorists, the officials said.
From Bhat,
the police were led to Mir and Rashid Bhat, both active associates of LeT in
Srinagar, and during the investigation, following disclosures from those
arrested, various hideouts were also busted in forested areas in and around
Srinagar.
The two
Pakistani terrorists are categorised as 'A+' grade militants, and the officials
said they infiltrated India approximately 16 years ago and remained active
across various districts of the Kashmir Valley, "commanding around 40
foreign terrorists" over the years, most of whom have since been
neutralised, the officials said.
Incriminating
material has been seized from several hideouts in various parts of Srinagar and
other cities, which included three AK-47 rifles, one AK-Krinkov rifle, pistols,
hand grenades, electronic equipment and gadgets, the officials said.
This
unearthing of the interstate LeT module comes nearly six months after the
action against the 'Al Falah module' in November 2025 by the Srinagar police.
The probe had then unravelled a network comprising highly educated
professionals, mostly doctors, who had been radicalised to carry out terrorist
activities.
One of the
accused was the Al Falah University's Dr Umer-un Nabi, who was driving the
explosives-laden car that detonated outside the Red Fort on November 10 last
year, killing more than a dozen people.
He had earlier made unsuccessful attempts to join terror groups in 2016 and 2018, the officials said.
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