Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

Pathankot terror attack: Pakistan lodges FIR with no names

February 19, 2016 14:03 IST

Pakistani authorities have lodged a first information report into the Pathankot terror attack case, officials said on Friday after weeks of probe into the assault that led to the postponement of Indo-Pak foreign secretary-level talks. 

The FIR was registered at counter-terrorism department centre at Gujranwala in Pakistan's Punjab province on Thursday.

According to a CTD official, the FIR was needed to start police and judicial proceedings on the basis of evidence collected in connection with the attack for which India has blamed Pakistan-based terror group, Jaish e Mohammed .

India has identified Maulana Masood Azhar as the mastermind of the attack. It has also blamed his brother Rauf and five others for carrying out the attack that killed all six terrorists and seven Indian soldiers.

The FIR number 06/2016 was lodged under sections 302, 324 and 109 of the Pakistan penal code, and sections 7 and 21-I of the anti-terrorism act.

Nobody has been named in the report lodged on the basis of information provided by India's National Security Adviser Ajit Doval that four attackers probably crossed from Pakistan into India and attacked the airbase on January 2.

The attack led to the postponement of a scheduled meeting between foreign secretaries of Pakistan and India in January in Islamabad. Since then, no date has been fixed for talks.

The FIR also shows that the telephone numbers contacted by the terrorists during the attack. A police official said that after the registration of the FIR, any accused can be presented before the court for start of a formal trial.

According to intelligence officials, about a dozen suspects were arrested in Pakistan following the attack.

The FIR has reportedly been registered on the recommendations of a six-member special team probing the attack.

Last month the CTD police Gujranwala had presented three JeM militants before an anti-terrorism court for possessing jihadi literature.

The suspects were arrested by the CTD from a seminary run by the JeM in Mundeyki, where the headquarters of the 2008 Mumbai attack mastermind Hafiz Saeed's Jamaat-ud-Dawah is located.

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had formed a six-member investigation team headed by the additional inspector general of Punjab's CTD, Rai Tahir, to probe India's assertion that the JeM was behind the attack.

Sajjad Hussain in Islamabad
© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.