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At border village, recalling Army’s Myanmar operation: ‘We heard shooting, explosions

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In this last Indian village in Manipur’s Ukhrul district, there is no telling where India ends and Myanmar begins. The boundary is not demarcated visibly, and the small teak huts standing on wooden stilts could be in either country. On the morning of June 9, sleepy, isolated Phaikoh was jolted by the sounds of Indian soldiers attacking Naga militant camps in the area in retaliation against the June 4 ambush of the 6 Dogra Regiment.

“Suddenly, we heard a lot of shooting and bombs going off in the near distance. Boom, boom, boom. We were wondering what was happening. We didn’t see any soldiers go through our village or in the surrounding jungles. We assume they must have gone very quietly at night, on foot,” 55-year-old Hemlet Guite, a village elder, said.

It was approximately 8 in the morning when Phaikoh first heard the “sounds of the battle” — around the time its 16 schoolchildren had just begun classes at the village school.

“We did see them coming back, though,” Guite said. “In the afternoon, it must have been two or three o’clock, a stream of Indian Army soldiers started walking into the village. Then the helicopters started coming. They landed on our football field, and the soldiers started to get on. It looked as though there were at least a hundred soldiers. There were two helicopters, and each made three trips. Some of the soldiers left on foot,’’ Guite added.

Sixty-five-year-old Hemkhoshei, a minister of the village council, said it was the first time he saw an Army chopper. “I was very excited. One Armyman told me to shut my eyes because there would be a lot of dust as the machine landed,” he laughed.

Sauntering easily into Myanmarese territory, stepping over the shallow, muddy trench that marks the border, Hemkhoshei pointed to the grey-blue hill rising above the treetops, its peak surrounded by wispy white clouds.
“That is Angko Chingbo hill,” he said. It is about 15 km inside Myanmar. The UNLF, PLA and KYKL have their camps there. That is where the Army went that day.

“We have heard that nothing is left of the PLA camp now. But we do not know if the Army managed to reach the UNLF camp. It is on the other side of the mountain, and very difficult to reach,” Hemkhoshei added. According to him, the PLA camp had more than a hundred residents.

Residents of Phaikoh said insurgents often travelled to border villages on the Indian side “for patrolling”. Cadres of the UNLF were the most frequent visitors, they said.

“They come at least once a month, sometimes more often. They talk to us, eat their lunch, and go back. But we never have to feed them. They give us money to buy rice, and cook for themselves. Twenty, or even 40 insurgents come at a time. We haven’t seen any since Tuesday (June 9), though,” said Janghen Jangkhohem, secretary of the village council.

Guite said the villagers have a good rapport with the UNLF. “There is no doctor or pharmacy in the village. So the UNLF insurgents sometimes give us medicines. Malaria is endemic here, and they often hold medical camps in the village, to which they bring a doctor. In return, they ask us for information — on who comes here, and what we hear about the Army. Last Christmas, the UNLF gave us money to buy a pig or cow for a feast,” Guite said.

Hemkhoshei said UNLF cadres sometimes held meetings with the village council or elders. “They talk to us of development… roads, better schools, medical facilities, electricity. They have told us that they would help us get all these things,” he said.

No resident of Phaikoh has ever visited any of the camps, however. What they know about them is based on what they have heard from friends in Myanmar who visit the camps to sell their wares to the insurgents. “Since Tuesday, Myanmar has completely sealed off the border. We can’t even go to Mongjang, the neighbouring village on the other side. But hopefully, the restrictions will be lifted soon,” Guite said.

Across a range of three hills closer to the Indian side of the border, at the village of Nampisha, villagers recalled the happenings of June 9.

“Helicopters were flying in and out. Huge helicopters. We could here gunfire in the distance. We gathered at the church and I told my congregation to pray. I warned them not to stray far from the village. Not to even go out hunting. To just stay indoors and pray,” said pastor Akhui Kamkara.

The 44 Assam Rifles has an outpost at Nampisha, villagers said, and they had tightened their vigil. No one was going towards Phaikoh, villagers said.
 
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Guite said the villagers have a good rapport with the UNLF. “There is no doctor or pharmacy in the village. So the UNLF insurgents sometimes give us medicines. Malaria is endemic here, and they often hold medical camps in the village, to which they bring a doctor....
Hemkhoshei said UNLF cadres sometimes held meetings with the village council or elders. “They talk to us of development… roads, better schools, medical facilities, electricity. They have told us that they would help us get all these things,” he said....

Why can't the fukcing Indian govt. do these things??.....
I understand that setting up a hospital and making it function in an insurgency hit area is difficult, but why can't our govt. organize such medical camps(under tight security), distribute medicines once in a while in such poor and remote villages of India??.......
If it's difficult to set up a school and send teachers from elsewhere, why can't the govt. take the initiative to teach some villagers in someplace safer and help them set up schools on their own in their villages??.......

The Indian govt. is capable of deploying soldiers inside Myanmar territory to destroy militants but unable to develop roads, provide electricity, build schools and medical facilities inside Indian territory......fukcing unbelievable..........a fukced up country with fukced up priorities....

I can't blame the villagers for building good rapport with the militants.....
 
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Why can't the fukcing Indian govt. do these things??.....
I understand that setting up a hospital and making it function in an insurgency hit area is difficult, but why can't our govt. organize such medical camps(under tight security), distribute medicines once in a while in such poor and remote villages of India??.......
If it's difficult to set up a school and send teachers from elsewhere, why can't the govt. take the initiative to teach some villagers in someplace safer and help them set up schools on their own in their villages??.......

The Indian govt. is capable of deploying soldiers inside Myanmar territory to destroy militants but unable to develop roads, provide electricity, build schools and medical facilities inside Indian territory......fukcing unbelievable..........a fukced up country with fukced up priorities....

I can't blame the villagers for building good rapport with the militants.....

that is very remote area. we have so many places like this in india so gov. have some limitations, which is exploited by these kind of militants.
 
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Why can't the fukcing Indian govt. do these things??.....
I understand that setting up a hospital and making it function in an insurgency hit area is difficult, but why can't our govt. organize such medical camps(under tight security), distribute medicines once in a while in such poor and remote villages of India??.......
If it's difficult to set up a school and send teachers from elsewhere, why can't the govt. take the initiative to teach some villagers in someplace safer and help them set up schools on their own in their villages??.......

The Indian govt. is capable of deploying soldiers inside Myanmar territory to destroy militants but unable to develop roads, provide electricity, build schools and medical facilities inside Indian territory......fukcing unbelievable..........a fukced up country with fukced up priorities....

I can't blame the villagers for building good rapport with the militants.....

Destroying these thugs is easy, developing something and protecting it take a lot of effort and investment. Such infrastructure would be a prime target for these insurgents.

So it would be prudent to wipe the insurgents and then construct infrastructure; however, I agree that its required.
 
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@special operation
You should have given the source lad.
At border village, recalling Army’s Myanmar operation: ‘We heard shooting, explosions… boom, boom, boom’ | idrw.org

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Subedar Raghupathi, who hails from Sullia, is home for some much-needed R&R. But what his wife Bharathi and other members of his inner circle didn’t know until he walked through the door of their home on an arecanut farm at Mandekolu village, in a remote corner of Karnataka’s Sullia, is that Raghupathi had led a team of commandos into Myanmar to lay waste to a militant camp under cover of darkness, and then as quickly hot-footed it back to the Indian side. A Myanmarese insider took them through the dense jungle and the troops of 21 Para crept up on the sleeping militants and burnt their camps to a cinder. In the first such account of the actual operation, the brave subedar tells Gururaj A. Paniyadi that there was not one moment of doubt that they would succeed.

On the morning of June 6, Bharathi called to wish her husband Subedar Raghupathi U.M. of the 21 Para (Special Forces) on their 14th anniversary. She noticed at once that he seemed very distracted and quite unlike his usual, gregarious self. What Bharathi didn’t know was that her husband’s focus was concentrated on what would become one of the Indian Army’s most celebrated strikes – the cross-border attack into militant camps deep inside Myanmar, one that has shaken India’s neighbours, who have become accustomed to a government that always played it by the book.

Raghupathi, who just about remembered to wish his wife on their anniversary, merely said that he was busy preparing for an ‘operation’ that he was about to set out on, which he couldn’t discuss. He also told her that he would not be available on the telephone for the next three to four days.

It was only after his safe return that Bharathi learned the shocking truth – her husband was part of the crack team of commandos who entered Myanmar and eliminated about 50 Northeast insurgents. While Raghupathi remained a faceless, nameless operative, the operation, which drew international attention transformed India from a country known more for its passive stance into one that would no longer stand for any challenges to its sovereignty.

Raghupathi, who hails from Mandekolu village of Sullia taluk in D.K. district, comes from a long line of fighters. Signing up to join the Maratha Regiment in 1991, he completed his Para Commando course and joined the elite 21 Para (SF) in 1996. His family lives in Sullia and his elder brother is a serving member of the CISF in Rajasthan. Both brothers were inspired by an uncle, who is serving in the Army.

“I am proud that I was part of this prestigious operation that killed the Northeast insurgents. We were successful in killing the terrorists who had killed our jawans in Manipur few days ago. It was special as it was a cross border operation. This strike has surely increased the morale of our armed forces,” Raghupathi told this newspaper.

Subedar Raghupathi was the squad commander during the operation, which was carried out by two teams. While one team had been pulled together from Manipur, the other team of 21 Para (SF) team with 57 commandos had gone in from Nagaland.

“I was not hesitant or scared. This was not my first operation. I was part of several such operations including Operation Loktak. But this was really challenging as we had to walk for about 30 kms, cross the Indian border on foot and enter Myanmar without being noticed by the enemy,” he said.

Within hours of the Chandel ambush, the army began gathering details of the enemy, with the commandos being put on alert for a possible attack on the militant’s camps. The daily gruelling drills that they normally endured were now stretched over about three days, Subedar Raghupathi said.

As the commandos, who included both ambush and attack teams, had to ensure the operation remained under wraps, they went through the motions of joining the Assam Rifles team that left to Teknyo village on the morning of June 6, ostensibly to a medical camp.

The real challenge began after the team left the medical camp and began marching towards the border with every commando now well aware that he had to cover about 30 kms on foot for the next two days. The commandos kept close to the Teknyo Sao rivulet to reach the target.

The journey was not easy as they carried a bag that weighed at least 30 kg and had to cover some 30 kms of unknown terrain that was mostly thick jungle, through the night of June 8 and into the early hours of June 9, with the estimated time of attack set for of 3.30 am.

The only food that the Special Ops team had was dry rations that would last for a maximum of three days. Apart from keeping themselves hidden from the militants, they had to thresh through dense forest, aware that any false move could attract not just enemy fire but wild animals and worst of all, leeches.

Movement was severely restricted during the day, to avoid attracting attention. At night, the commandos moved through the darkness, crossing the forested hills and picking their way through the rivers with one eye on the time.

A chance Myanmarese insider was to prove their best informant. After trekking almost continuously for nearly 48 hours, once the commandos crossed into Myanmar, the soldiers finally closed in on the enemy camp. It was 2.30 am on June 9. The local villager explained the tricky terrain and showed them the safest route to the enemy camp. The enemy camp was situated 3 kms inside Myanmar border. Around 3.30 am on June 9, the commandos had the the enemy camp encircled, the 15 huts in their gunsights as they opened fire. The terrorists, sleeping inside the camp had no inkling that the Indian armed forces would launch an attack deep inside the Myanmar border, said the subedar.

The firing lasted for just about 15-20 minutes. “All the terrorists were killed and the huts destroyed by our Indian commandos,” he said. The team used the guns, rocket launchers and explosives that they had brought with them. Some of the militants who tried to fire were killed before they could pull the trigger.

“We caught them completely by surprise. Within minutes of laying waste to the camp, we retraced our steps and embarked on the nine-km trek back on foot. The most difficult 9 kms, really. As we had walked in water for several hours, our skin was damp and we had all sustained multiple abrasions along the way, along with the small wounds caused by leeches,” the subedar said.

“But yes, none of that seemed to matter. We had had the satisfaction of flushing out the militants who killed our brothers in Manipur,” said Raghupathi. “We are proud of of having been part of the first permitted cross-border operation.”

Bharathi, who is happy about her husband’s participation in the operation, has no qualms in admitting her fears and concern for Raghupathi’s safety. “I am happy that he was part of this operation. But we have seen the militants attacking jawans and armed forces in the Northeast and that makes me very concerned about him. However, I never voice my fears to him aloud as he does not like me being scared. He has been part of several such operations and I am proud of him,” Bharathi said. The family has a small arecanut plantation in Mandekolu village.
While they were sleeping… | idrw.org
 
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a cooked up story from IDRW.org thats all i can share.
Bollywood writers make much more decent story with touch of reality at times.
 
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Says someone who was attacked in 2011 Abbottabad and lost half of the country in 71.

The list is endless....

US marines killing Pakistani soldiers at check posts, Militants attacking navy base, bomb blast at will during the past decade..... still they say we are cowards.....

If anything, India was a pussy in the 1990s..... today, after Mumbai attacks, by God's grace we have had zero terrorist attacks in the mainland other than a few skirmishes in Kashmir and NE (Which has dcreased like 1000s of times).

As far as the Maoists are concerned, 27 districts have been declared Maoist free since 2014 and the only affected ones stand at around 41 (AP, Orissa, Maharashtra and Jharkhand) as compared to 187 in 2009.
 
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