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Samba (Jammu and Kashmir): Reports suggest that the Intelligence Bureau has blamed the Border Security Force for the sudden rise in infiltration after more than three years on the International Border.
On Sunday, two terrorists were shot dead after a 12-hour-long intense gun battle with the security forces near Jammu in which five people, including a woman hostage and a photo-journalist, were also killed.
According to the police, the terrorists initially entered the house of Hoshiar Singh in Kali Mandi in Samba, 45 km from Jammu, and opened fire, killing him and his wife Shashi Bala, and injuring their daughter Bindu and another relative.
Police and army units, alerted by villagers, converged on the area and engaged the terrorists in a gun battle.
A soldier and a photojournalist, Ashok Sodhi, also died in the exchange of fire. Two others were also reported injured in the terrorist attack — the first in the Jammu plains since 2002.
The terrorists, after being chased by security personnel, hid in a nearby house belonging to Suresh Singh. A woman and two children were trapped inside the house. In the afternoon, the terrorists killed the woman and threw her body out of the house.
After killing the two terrorists, the security forces launched a "mopping-up operation" searching the area.
A police official earlier said: "The gun battle intensified as terrorists lobbed grenades and kept firing intermittently. The troops also retaliated."
More army reinforcements were rushed to the spot, he added.
The injured were taken to the Government Medical College Hospital, Jammu, the official said.
Inspector General of Police (Jammu zone) K. Rajendra told IANS the terrorists could be a group that had crossed into Samba sector from Pakistan Thursday night.
"They might have been lying low as there were ambushes laid in the area. But villagers must have spotted them this morning and they must have opened fire then."
Security forces suspect the infiltration bid Thursday, recovery of a cache of arms and ammunition in the area Saturday and Sunday's attack might be an attempt to disrupt the Amarnath Yatra that begins June 18.
"We have inputs of more terrorists coming from across the border in a bid to escalate violence and disrupt the Amarnath pilgrimage as also the assembly elections scheduled for later this year," said Maj. Gen. D. Choudhary, general officer commanding of 26 Division that is responsible for army deployment in the border areas.
Thousands of Hindus travel to Jammu via Samba on their onward journey to Kashmir to visit the Himalayan cave shrine of Amarnath at this time of the year. There have been attempts in the past to target devotees.
"The terrorists could not have intruded without the knowledge of Pakistani Rangers," a police official said.
The Border Security Force (BSF), which guards the 187-km international border, had claimed that it had foiled the infiltration bid Thursday night and that over a dozen terrorists had retreated to Pakistan after firing 1,000 rounds from their weapons.
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