Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
International

Pakistan Submits Initial Findings, ISI Joins Probe On Pathankot Attack

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Jan, 2016 11:32 AM
    Pakistan on Monday submitted to India its initial findings on alleged Pakistani links to the Pathankot terror attack saying that the telephone numbers given by India were not registered in Pakistan, a news report here said.
     
    A Joint Investigation Team, formed following a directive of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, submitted the initial findings on the alleged Pakistani links to the terrorist attack on the Indian Air Force station in Punjab's Pathankot district earlier this month.
     
    "According to sources close to the development, the investigation report has been handed over to Indian authorities," The News International said.
     
    It said Indian authorities provided Pakistan details of telephonic conversations that terrorists, believed to be Pakistanis, had had with their handlers and family members from the air base.
     
    According to the Indian authorities, the terrorists who sneaked into Punjab and attacked the IAF base on January 2 were affiliated to the proscribed outfit Jaish-e-Mohammad.
     
    The report quoted unnamed sources as saying that the telephone numbers given by India were not registered in Pakistan.
     
    "The investigation agencies were further investigating (leads) pertaining to Pathankot attackers," it said.
     
    A media report on Monday said Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and Military Intelligence were helping probe the suspected Pakistani link to the terror attack on the IAF base.
     
     
    The ISI, the Military Intelligence and the Intelligence Bureau were part of a Joint Investigation Team (JIT) formed following a directive of Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, the Express Tribune reported.
     
    The decision to form the JIT was taken at a high-level meeting chaired by Sharif "a few days ago", it said.
     
    Pakistani news reports on Friday had said that Sharif directed the Intelligence Bureau to probe the leads provided by New Delhi on the alleged Pakistani links to the January 2 terror attack in Punjab.
     
    The pre-dawn attack on the Indian Air Force (IAF) station killed seven security personnel. Security forces killed all six attackers who were said to have sneaked into Punjab from Pakistan.
     
    "Nawaz (Sharif) is taking an active role in getting to the bottom of the Pathankot incident," a source in the Prime Minister's House was quoted as saying. 
     
    "He (Sharif) also discussed the issue with army chief Gen Raheel Sharif and took him on board about the decision to form a JIT," it added.
     
    India has provided Islamabad "actionable information" on the terrorists' alleged Pakistani links. New Delhi wants Sharif to crack down on those who planned the audacious terrorist attack.
     
    After the terror attack, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif promised his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi that his government will act on information provided by New Delhi on the terrorists' alleged Pakistani links.
     
    "Nawaz (Sharif) has assured his Indian counterpart (Narendra Modi) that Pakistan will investigate the matter and make the results public," the report said.
     
    But Pakistani officials have told their media that the information given by India was not enough and may not stand scrutiny in a court of law.
     
    The News International quoted "highly placed diplomatic sources" as saying that the foreign secretary-level talks between Pakistan and India could be deferred by New Delhi as there was no information so far about the visit of the Indian foreign secretary for the January 15 talks in Islamabad.
     
    "It is likely that India would notify the postponement at the eleventh hour some time next week," the daily said.
     
    No communication has taken place between Islamabad and New Delhi on the foreign secretary-level talks since the Pathankot attack, it said.
     
     
    Pakistan does not want the foreign secretary-level talks to get derailed as they were expected to pave the way for a comprehensive composite dialogue covering all outstanding disputes, including Kashmir, it added.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Humanitarian Visa Sought For Attacked Indian's Wife

    Humanitarian Visa Sought For Attacked Indian's Wife
    A noted Indian-American lawyer has sent a letter to US Secretary of State John Kerry to issue a humanitarian visa to the wife of an Indian grandfather assaulted by an Alabama policeman.

    Humanitarian Visa Sought For Attacked Indian's Wife

    Indian-American Rashad Hussain Named US Strategic Counter Terrorism Communications Envoy

    Indian-American Rashad Hussain Named US Strategic Counter Terrorism Communications Envoy
    Rashad Hussain, of Indian heritage, has been appointed as US envoy and coordinator for Strategic Counter-Terrorism Communications to expand international engagement and partnerships to counter violent extremism.

    Indian-American Rashad Hussain Named US Strategic Counter Terrorism Communications Envoy

    Attack On Indian Grandfather: Alabama Governor Apologises; Officer Pleads Not Guilty

    Attack On Indian Grandfather: Alabama Governor Apologises; Officer Pleads Not Guilty
    Eleven days after a police officer in Alabama slammed a visiting Indian grandfather to the ground leaving him partially paralysed, the state governor has issued an apology, even as the officer pleaded not guilty.

    Attack On Indian Grandfather: Alabama Governor Apologises; Officer Pleads Not Guilty

    Islamic State Executes 40 People In Iraq

    Islamic State Executes 40 People In Iraq
    IS militants captured over 40 people from the albu-Obeid Sunni tribe, including policemen and members of the government-backed Sahwa paramilitary group, in al-Baghdadi town, and executed them, Xinhua cited the official, who did not wish to be named

    Islamic State Executes 40 People In Iraq

    Hindu Temple Vandalized In Bothell, 36 Km From Seattle; Protests In India

    Hindu Temple Vandalized In Bothell, 36 Km From Seattle; Protests In India
    Members of the Hindu Temple Cultural Center in Bothell, 36 km from Seattle, in Washington state were shocked to find a red swastika spray-painted on the temple wall along with the words "Get Out" scrawled in large letters on Sunday.

    Hindu Temple Vandalized In Bothell, 36 Km From Seattle; Protests In India

    Strong Earthquake Hits Northern Japan, Tsunami And Evacuation Warnings Issued

    Strong Earthquake Hits Northern Japan, Tsunami And Evacuation Warnings Issued
    A strong earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.9 was recorded off northeastern Japan on Tuesday, the U.S. Geological Survey said, and the Japan Meteorological Agency issued a tsunami warning.

    Strong Earthquake Hits Northern Japan, Tsunami And Evacuation Warnings Issued