Manipur attack aftermath: As it happened on Friday

Imphal: Live updates from developments taking place in the wake of a deadly attack on the Indian Army’s 6 Dogra Regiment on Thursday in Manipur’s Chandel district:

  • Army chief Dalbir Singh, after his visit to Manipur where he took stock of the situation, met NSA Ajit Doval.
  • Reports
    say senior Indian Army officers will take part in a formal
    wreath-laying ceremony early on Saturday at the Imphal International
    Airport.
  • As per sources, post-mortem of seven of the 18 soldiers
    killed in yesterday’s attack has been completed, and the post-mortem of
    the remaining eleven will be completed by this evening.
  • PTI has
    reported that a massive combing operation is underway in Manipur to
    track down insurgents in areas of Chandel district where 18 Army jawans
    were killed and 11 others injured in an ambush yesterday. The search
    operation was being conducted by the Army and Assam Rifles personnel at
    Paralong, Charong, Moltuh and some other areas to track down the
    insurgents who had launched attack on the Army jawans.
  • Defence
    Ministry spokesman Lt Col S Newton has told reporters in Guwahati that
    the Army Chief is expected to visit Chandel district where the Dogra
    Regiment soldiers were killed on Thursday morning.
  • News agency
    ANI has reported that in total, three militant organisations have
    claimed responsibility for yesterday’s attack on the Army convoy. Apart
    from NSCN-K, the Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL) and the Kangleipak
    Communist Party (KCP) have also reportedly claimed responsibility for
    the ambush.
  • Army Chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag has arrived in
    Imphal. He is holding a high-level meet to review the situation post
    yesterday’s deadly attack. Reports say he might also honour soldiers
    killed in the attack.
  • Union Minister of State in the Prime
    Minister’s Office Jitendra Singh meets Home Minister Rajnath Singh to
    discuss the situation post Manipur attack. “Met Home Minister today who
    directed us to send as much help and security forces there,” Jitendra
    Singh told reporters.
  • New agency ANI has tweeted some details of
    the 18 Armymen who were martyred in yesterday’s Manipur attack – six
    were from J&K, seven from Himachal Pradesh, two from UP, and one
    each from Punjab, Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka.
  • Army Chief General Dalbir Singh Suhag has left for Imphal and will reach the Manipur capitay shortly.
  • Hours
    after 18 soldiers of the Indian Army’s 6 Dogra Regiment were killed and
    11 others injured in an ambush near Myanmar border in Manipur’s Chandel
    district, militant group Nationalist Socialist Council of
    Nagaland-Khaplang [NSCN(K)] has claimed responsibility for the attack.

“An
elite strike unit of Naga Army, Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL) and the
Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) carried out the ambush today
(Thursday),” The NSCN-K said in a statement issued to the media.

It may be recalled that the NSCN(K) had pulled out of a ceasefire with the government in March this year.

  • The
    Central government on Thursday ordered an all-out offensive against
    Northeast rebel groups in the wake of yesterday’s attack. As per
    reports, the Centre has asked the Army to launch ‘search and destroy’
    operations against NSCN(K) and other insurgent groups in the Northeast.

What happened on Thursday:

In
one of the worst attacks suffered by the Indian Army in a decade, at
least 18 soldiers were killed and 11 injured on Thursday when militants
ambushed their convoy in Manipur’s Chandel district.

Prime
Minister Narendra Modi, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar, Indian Army
chief General Dalbir Singh, Congress president Sonia Gandhi and Home
Minister Rajnath Singh, among others, condemned the attack.

Earlier reports said 20 soldiers were killed, but army officials later revised the toll to 18.

According
to Army sources, the team that was attacked belonged to 6 Dogra
Regiment and was an administrative convoy moving out of its location.

The
attack occurred between Paralong and Charong villages around 8.30 am
when militants used improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and
rocket-propelled grenades (RPGs) while also opened heavy fire at the
four-vehicle convoy.

Most of the bodies were charred, officials said.

Those
injured were airlifted to Leimakhong military hospital near Imphal,
while a reinforcement party was rushed to the spot for combing
operations.

“One of the vehicles – probably the first vehicle in
the convoy – which was hit first by the RPG caught fire immediately,” a
defence spokesman said. The soldiers retaliated but the militants
managed to escape.

According to reports, the area has been on the
boil after a woman was allegedly killed by troopers of the paramilitary
Assam Rifles. Reports also said there was a shutdown in Chandel over the
incident.

Insiders, meanwhile, said it was a major intelligence failure.

According
to officials, this was the worst attack on the Indian Army in over a
decade in which so many personnel lost their lives.

Lately, a surge in such attacks has been noticed in the Northeast.

On
April 2, three soldiers were killed in an ambush by NSCN-K in Arunachal
Pradesh’s Tirap district. On May 3, seven Assam Rifles troopers and one
personnel of the Territorial Army were killed in another ambush in
Nagaland’s Mon district by joint forces of the newly-floated United
Liberation Front of Western South East Asia comprising NSCN-K, ULFA,
Kamatapur Liberation Organisation and NDFB-Songbijit.

Defence expert, Brig SK Chatterji (retd) said the attack indicates external interference in the area was on the rise.

“There
are reports that a month and a half back, leaders of these groups
travelled to China. It can be a desperate step to disturb peace,
specially since the new government has been firm on the boundary
issues,” Chatterji told IANS.

Manipur, which shares a 398-km border with Myanmar, has about 40 militant outfits.

While
more than 20 armed groups have ceasefire agreements with the state and
central governments, the Coordination Committee, an umbrella group of
six major militant outfits, has been rejecting the offer for peace
talks.

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