Thursday , April 25 2024

AUTHORITIES DECLARE PROPAGANDA Daesh claims province in India

By SJA Jafri

MELBOURNE/ NEW DELHI/ SRINAGAR: The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), also known as deash/ISIS) has claimed for the first time that it has established a “province” in India, a claim that authorities in India-administered Kashmir have denied and declared as “propaganda” while the sources closed to a neighbouring country claimed that over 20,000 well equipped, trained, experienced and armed members of Daesh have already been established, organized and ready to fulfil their tasks earlier in designated areas of the province.

ISIL’s Amaq News Agency yesterday released a statement in which it called the new province “Wilayah of Hind”, and also claimed the group inflicted casualties on Indian Army Soldiers in the town of Amshipora in India-administered Kashmir’s Shopian district.

The ISIL statement corresponded with an Indian police statement on Friday that an armed rebel called Ishfaq Ahmad Sufi was killed in an encounter in Shopian, Reuters News Agency reported on Saturday.

“This is pure propaganda. The militancy part of the ISIL is over in Kashmir completely. However, the ideological inclination is there to some extent,” a senior police official in India-administered Kashmir told media on condition of anonymity.

The police officer added that Sufi was the last ISIL fighter in Kashmir. “One more was there but he joined another armed group,” he said.

Rita Katz, director of the SITE Intel Group that tracks armed fighters, told Reuters that the ISIL claim “should not be written off”.

“The establishment of a ‘province’ in a region where it has nothing resembling actual governance is absurd, but it should not be written off,” said Katz.

“The world may roll its eyes at these developments, but to jihadists in these vulnerable regions, these are significant gestures to help lay the groundwork in rebuilding the map of the ISIL ‘caliphate’.”

ISIL’s statement establishing the new province appeared to be designed to bolster its standing after the group was driven from its self-styled “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria in April, where at one point it controlled thousands of miles of territory.

ISIL has stepped up hit-and-run raids and suicide attacks, including taking responsibility for the Easter Sunday Bombing in Sri Lanka that killed at least 300 people.

Sufi had been involved in several rebel groups in Kashmir for more than a decade before pledging allegiance to ISIL, according to a military official and an interview given by Sufi to a Srinagar-based magazine sympathetic to ISIL, Reuters said.

He was suspected of several grenade attacks on security forces in the region, police and military sources said. “It was a clean operation and no collateral damage took place during the exchange of fire,” a police spokesman said in the statement on Friday’s encounter.

The military official said it was possible that Sufi was the only fighter left in Kashmir associated with ISIL.

Separatists have for decades fought an armed conflict against Indian rule in Muslim-majority Kashmir. The majority of these groups want independence for Kashmir or to join India’s archrival Pakistan.

They have not, like ISIL, sought to establish an empire across the Muslim world.

Nuclear powers India and Pakistan have fought two wars over Kashmir, and came closer to the brink of a third earlier this year after a suicide attack by a Pakistan-based group killed at least 40 paramilitary police in the Indian-administered portion of the Himalayan territory.

A spokesman for India’s Home Ministry, which is responsible for security in India-administered Kashmir, did not respond to a request for comment, Reuters said.

Check Also

Columbia protesters vow to remain until demands met

25-04-2024 NEW YORK: Pro-Palestinian protesters have refused to disband from Columbia University’s main campus after …