Old Embers, Young Fire
THE WEEK|January 21, 2018

On New Year’s Eve, a Jaish-e-Mohammad suicide squad attacked a CRPF camp in Kashmir, killing five security personnel. The first suicide attack in 17 years by local militants, it was masterminded by a 16-yearold. THE WEEK examines how JeM attracts teenagers to join the ranks of fidayeen in an attempt to become the predominant militant group in Kashmir

Tariq Bhat
Old Embers, Young Fire

Dawn was breaking when I reached Tral, a town in Pulwama district of Jammu and Kashmir. I was on my way to Nazneenpora, the village of Fardeen Khanday, the 16-yearold boy who led a suicide attack on a camp of the Central Reserve Police Force at Lethpora on the Srinagar-Jammu national highway. Fardeen and two of his accomplices—Manzoor Ahmed Baba, another local Kashmiri, and Muhammad Shakoor from Pakistan—were part of a Jaish-e-Mohammad suicide squad, which targeted the camp on New Year’s Eve. The CRPF was shaken by the attack on the high security camp, which also housed a training facility and residential quarters. Four CRPF personnel died in the firefight; one died of cardiac arrest during the attack.

The last time a Kashmiri was involved in a suicide attack was in 2000, when Afaq Ahmed Shah, a JeM militant from Khanyar in Srinagar, tried to ram an explosive-laden car into the Army’s 15 Corps headquarters at Badami Bagh in Srinagar. The involvement of two local boys in a suicide attack after 17 years has alarmed security agencies. Two days after the attack, the JeM posted a video on Facebook, which was recorded just before the attack. In the video, Fardeen is seen sitting cross-legged, wearing a pheran (a winter gown popular in Kashmir) and a kaffiyeh, in front of a stash of grenades and an AK-47 rifle, and explaining in chaste Urdu why he had become a fidayeen.

This story is from the January 21, 2018 edition of THE WEEK.

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This story is from the January 21, 2018 edition of THE WEEK.

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