Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
India

Hafeez Saeed asks LeT to recruit flood-affected Kashmiri youths

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Nov, 2014 06:41 AM
    Pakistani terrorist and 26/11 Mumbai attack mastermind Hafeez Saeed has asked the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) militant group to recruit youth in Kashmir who have been rendered homeless and jobless by devastating floods in the Valley, sources in the Indian intelligence agencies said.
     
    "Saeed recently visited Pakistan Occupied Kashmir (POK) and asked the recruiters to motivate the homeless and jobless youths of Kashmir and POK for joining militancy after the floods," highly placed sources in the Intelligence Bureau (IB) told IANS, speaking on condition of anonymity.
     
    "The LeT thinks it's the best time for recruitment as many youths have become jobless due to the floods in the state," the sources added.
     
    The Sep 7 floods wreaked havoc in Kashmir and POK, leaving hundreds dead and thousands homeless. 
     
    The IB alert has been shared with several states, including Delhi and Jammu and Kashmir. It also says that LeT "may target monuments and embassies located in
    Delhi".
     
    "He (Saeed) is an influential personality, his visit definitely would have boosted the moral of the recruiting men on the other side of the border. Idle men are best to employ," security expert Major General Prabir Kumar Chakravarti (retd) told IANS.
     
    "The rehabilitation of such youths are important. The government should look into this," Chakravarti added.
     
    Saeed, one of India's most wanted terrorists, is a major irritant in the already strained relationship between India and Pakistan as New Delhi has expressed its resentment over his not being brought to book for the Mumbai attack, which claimed nearly 170 lives and injured hundreds.
     
    Saeed runs the Lahore-based Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD), which he claims is a humanitarian charity. The JuD has been blacklisted by the US, which has described it as a "foreign terrorist organisation". 
     
    According to sources, POK, spread over 13,297 square kilometres, has at least a dozen training camps of the LeT and the Indian Mujahideen (IM).
     
    Sources also said the militancy might intensify in Jammu and Kashmir, where assembly polls are due in Nov-Dec.
     
    Officials also believed that conducting the election soon after the floods would be a major challenge for the security forces.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Home ministry denies reported bugging at Gadkari's home

    Home ministry denies reported bugging at Gadkari's home
    The home ministry Monday denied the reported bugging at union Minister Nitin Gadkari's residence, and ruled out any probe....

    Home ministry denies reported bugging at Gadkari's home

    HSGPC Vs SGPC: Let not competitive politics get constitutional sanctity

    HSGPC Vs SGPC: Let not competitive politics get constitutional sanctity
    Sikh politics is on the boil in Punjab and Haryana. Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal is insisting that Haryana roll back the Haryana Sikh Gurdwaras...

    HSGPC Vs SGPC: Let not competitive politics get constitutional sanctity

    Modi-Fying the System: Winds of change in Indian offices

    Modi-Fying the System: Winds of change in Indian offices
    Most officials are reporting for work on the dot at 9 a.m. and, those who get delayed, especially those coming from outside Delhi, have to perforce take the day...

    Modi-Fying the System: Winds of change in Indian offices

    India tops in South Asia's human trafficking: UN official

    India tops in South Asia's human trafficking: UN official
    South Asia representative of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Cristina Albertine, said that a majority of the victims are from...

    India tops in South Asia's human trafficking: UN official

    Rise of the fringes: Modi government faces acid test

    Rise of the fringes: Modi government faces acid test
    Are the fringes pulling at the centre from many directions? Is the NDA government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi facing its first major political challenge...

    Rise of the fringes: Modi government faces acid test

    'Crimes against children: Time to break conspiracy of silence'

    'Crimes against children: Time to break conspiracy of silence'
    A three-year-old boy was kicked and assaulted by her tutor in Kolkata, a six-year-old girl was raped by her skating teacher in Bangalore, blind children...

    'Crimes against children: Time to break conspiracy of silence'