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Indian explosives in Bangladeshi militants’ hands

EastBengalPro

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Between October 2015 and March this year, members of New JMB had used the same materials for making explosives. But things appear to have changed after March 7

Security forces have intensified anti-terror operations after last year’s attack at the Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan – the worst terrorist incident in Bangladesh’s history. But one thing that has since become a common feature of anti-militancy operations is the recovery of explosives, usually in huge quantities, from militant hideouts.

The latest raid on a militant hideout in Savar, on the outskirts of Dhaka, found explosives, bombs and suicide vests. Such recurrent recoveries have raised some serious questions: How and from where do the militants get explosives while evading law enforcement agencies?

Counter-terrorism officials claimed that most of the explosives – bombs, grenades, detonators and explosive gel – are brought from India. A New JMB group, led by Mizanur alias Boro Mizan, was in charge of smuggling the munitions through Chapainawabganj’s Shibganj border.

Mizan was arrested from Banani recently. Four of his associates were arrested on November 3 with grenades, 787 detonators and a firearm.

Counter-terrorism unit’s Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Sanwar Hossain said they had sealed off several routes along the border as well as sources used by militants to obtain explosives. He said they were currently trying to locate such sources inside the country.

Several Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit officials said New JMB’s Sohel Mahfuz alias Hatkata Mahfuz was currently leading the group tasked with collecting explosives.

The old JMB member has extensive knowledge about Indian explosive smuggling routes, the CTTC officials said. He used to smuggle explosives into Bangladesh from India through Mizan.

Mahfuz is currently in hiding and has created a new smuggling route in Jessore after the one in Chapainawabganj was sealed off.

Militants also use a number of tactics to gather explosives from inside the country, CTTC officials said. They sometimes purchase explosives under the pretence of using them in laboratories.

Furthermore, unscrupulous businessmen and laboratory staff sometimes supply explosives for money. Four people, including three chemical shop owners and a lab assistant of Dhaka University’s Department of Soil, Water and Environment, were arrested on June 15, 2015 for the offence.

CTTC ADC Sanwar said they had held several rounds of talks with the Department of Explosives and licensed chemicals traders to prevent militants from getting their hands on such deadly payloads.

“A new system is being introduced where retail sellers will collect and store detailed information about buyers and scrutinise them. This will make it easier for monitoring and help prevent purchase of chemicals under false identities,” he said.

Sanwar also said that CTTC had information that some people were importing chemicals without permission. Militants collect explosive material by using the names of factories where such chemicals are regularly used.

“Militants at Savar’s Genda obtained materials for making explosives by using the name of a cosmetics factory. Militant leader Mufti Hannan, too, used to collect such material in the name of a soap factory,” the CTTC officer added.

An unpleasant upgrade
Between October 2015 and March this year, members of New JMB had used the same materials for making explosives. But things appear to have changed after March 7. Some recently recovered explosives included materials for enhancing the destructive force of improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

A member of police’s bomb disposal unit said they recovered several suicide vests, each equipped with six handmade grenades, during their December 24 raid on a militant hideout at Ashkona. One of the militants had blown herself up.

But new types of vests were recovered from Chittagong’s Sitakunda, Sylhet’s Atia Mahal, Moulvibazar’s Nasirnagar and Borohat, as well as at Jhenaidah and Chapainawabganj in March, the official said. “These vests had materials with higher destructive capacity.”

Who makes the explosives?
Not all active members of New JMB can make bombs and grenades, according to CTTC officials. Only some top level leaders – including Hatkata Mahfuz and Hadisur Rahman Sagar – are believed to possess the necessary expertise.

During the recent anti-militancy raid at Moulvibazar, there were rumours of a youthful bomb making expert who had returned from Afghanistan. But there was no concrete information to support the claim.

A CTTC officer said they recovered a number of masks from militant hideouts. “Some senior leaders, who were trained bomb makers, never showed their faces to the young members and wore these masks during meetings,” the officer added.

http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/crime/2017/05/31/militants-explosives-supply-cttc/
 
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The Agra Police has made a sizeable discovery of illegal arms in the city in the past few months.
By Siraj Qureshi |
May 30, 2017
agra-arms-story_647_053017055836.jpg

No matter how strict gun control laws may be in India, the fact is that Uttar Pradesh tops the list of both legal and illegal arms possessed by civilians.

Minor fights between neighbors now result in shots being fired and most of these incidents of indiscriminate firing take place with illegal weapons - both in the form of crude country-made pistols and well-finished illegally manufactured arms.

The UP police has so far been unable to track down the suppliers of these illegal weapons. However, with the recent discovery of an illegal weapons factory in Agra and now the arrest of two pistol suppliers in the city, it is becoming clear that a parallel business of illegal arms manufacture and sale is operating in UP. Incidentally, this is fuelling the internecine tensions that are on the rise in the state.

The Agra Police has made a sizeable discovery of illegal arms in the city in the past few months and the recent arrest of Furkan and Raja Khan, who used to sell illegally manufactured pistols and their ammunition only to Muslims, has created an uproar in the intelligence agencies.

The duo claims to have sold at least 50 such pistols in Agra, all of which had been brought from Munger in Bihar and all of them in possession of Muslims. Four semi-automatic pistols, two magazines and four cartridges were also recovered from them.

Furkan told India Today that he is a labourer in a shoe factory but he also carries pistols hidden in shoe boxes to sell them to clients. SSP Agra D C Dubey told India Today that Furkan seems to be connected to elements in Pakistan as his phone list had several numbers listed from the neighbouring.

A supplier named Aman was also involved in this racket. So far, the police has been able to recover 20 names and addresses of the people who purchased these pistols.

ARMS SOLD TO MEMBERS OF MUSLIM COMMUNITY
The SSP claimed that both these suppliers sold pistols only to those belonging to the Muslim community. Some other accomplices of these two are being searched and as soon as they are nabbed, their entire planning will be unravelled, including the purpose of deliberately arming only one community with illegal and untraceable weapons. He said that it is possible that these weapons could be used in a communal incident in the city in the future, so the recovery of each and every illegal weapon was paramount.

He said that Furkan used to buy one pistol for Rs 15,000 in Munger and sold it for Rs 30,000 in Agra. Furkan has also travelled to Pakistan and the police in investigating his possible links to Pakistani smugglers and the ISI.

The SSP said that Furkan was soon to receive another consignment of 10 pistols from Munger, but he got arrested beforehand. Another agent's name has come to light in Firozabad and he is also being investigated.

Bhartiya Muslim Vikas Parishad Chairman Sami Aghai told India Today that Islam is against all illegal businesses, but no innocent Muslim should be implicated in criminal cases. Some young BJP activists are trying to give this illegal weapons sale a communal colour and the police and administration should be wary of such attempts to poison the city's atmosphere by the BJP.

http://m.indiatoday.in/lite/story/a...-bhartiya-muslim-vikas-parishad/1/966539.html
 
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Man arrested in Dhaka with 10 firearms
  • Arifur Rahman Rabbi
  • Published at 10:33 AM June 01, 2017
  • Last updated at 01:18 PM June 01, 2017
arrested-690x450.jpg

The illegal arms trader used to sell weapons to terrorists and goons in Dhaka
Police have arrested an illegal arms trader with nine pistols and ammunition from Dhaka’s Darus Salam area.

The Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit identified the arms trader as Alauddin, 46.

“We arrested him around 4am Thursday,” DMP Deputy Commissioner (media) Masudur Rahman told the Dhaka Tribune.

“Alauddin used to smuggle weapons from India and sold them to terrorists and goons in Dhaka,” CTTC Deputy Commissioner Abdur Rakib said.

“We got information that Alauddin had entered Bangladesh through Benapole border with illegal firearms brought from Mumbai,” he said.

“We arrested him as soon as he got down from the bus in Dhaka,” Rakib added.

Nine pistols, a shooter gun, magazines and bullets were found in a bag he was carrying. A case has been filed against him with Darus Salam police.

The CTTC official said they would seek the court’s permission to interrogate Alauddin in custody, saying, “We believe he has important information.”

http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/crime/2017/06/01/man-arrested-10-firearms-dhaka/

Indian explosives in Bangladeshi militants’ hands
  • Nuruzzaman Labu
  • Published at 06:15 PM May 31, 2017
  • Last updated at 09:40 PM May 31, 2017
MahmudOpu-explosives-militants-690x450.jpg

Counter-terrorism officials claim that most explosives used by militants are brought from India, but some are also illegally obtained from within Bangladesh Mahmud Hossain Opu/Dhaka Tribune
Between October 2015 and March this year, members of New JMB had used the same materials for making explosives. But things appear to have changed after March 7
Security forces have intensified anti-terror operations after last year’s attack at the Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan – the worst terrorist incident in Bangladesh’s history. But one thing that has since become a common feature of anti-militancy operations is the recovery of explosives, usually in huge quantities, from militant hideouts.

The latest raid on a militant hideout in Savar, on the outskirts of Dhaka, found explosives, bombs and suicide vests. Such recurrent recoveries have raised some serious questions: How and from where do the militants get explosives while evading law enforcement agencies?

Counter-terrorism officials claimed that most of the explosives – bombs, grenades, detonators and explosive gel – are brought from India. A New JMB group, led by Mizanur alias Boro Mizan, was in charge of smuggling the munitions through Chapainawabganj’s Shibganj border.

Mizan was arrested from Banani recently. Four of his associates were arrested on November 3 with grenades, 787 detonators and a firearm.

Counter-terrorism unit’s Additional Deputy Commissioner (ADC) Sanwar Hossain said they had sealed off several routes along the border as well as sources used by militants to obtain explosives. He said they were currently trying to locate such sources inside the country.

Several Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime (CTTC) unit officials said New JMB’s Sohel Mahfuz alias Hatkata Mahfuz was currently leading the group tasked with collecting explosives.

The old JMB member has extensive knowledge about Indian explosive smuggling routes, the CTTC officials said. He used to smuggle explosives into Bangladesh from India through Mizan.

Mahfuz is currently in hiding and has created a new smuggling route in Jessore after the one in Chapainawabganj was sealed off.

Militants also use a number of tactics to gather explosives from inside the country, CTTC officials said. They sometimes purchase explosives under the pretence of using them in laboratories.

Furthermore, unscrupulous businessmen and laboratory staff sometimes supply explosives for money. Four people, including three chemical shop owners and a lab assistant of Dhaka University’s Department of Soil, Water and Environment, were arrested on June 15, 2015 for the offence.

CTTC ADC Sanwar said they had held several rounds of talks with the Department of Explosives and licensed chemicals traders to prevent militants from getting their hands on such deadly payloads.

“A new system is being introduced where retail sellers will collect and store detailed information about buyers and scrutinise them. This will make it easier for monitoring and help prevent purchase of chemicals under false identities,” he said.

Sanwar also said that CTTC had information that some people were importing chemicals without permission. Militants collect explosive material by using the names of factories where such chemicals are regularly used.

“Militants at Savar’s Genda obtained materials for making explosives by using the name of a cosmetics factory. Militant leader Mufti Hannan, too, used to collect such material in the name of a soap factory,” the CTTC officer added.

An unpleasant upgrade
Between October 2015 and March this year, members of New JMB had used the same materials for making explosives. But things appear to have changed after March 7. Some recently recovered explosives included materials for enhancing the destructive force of improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

A member of police’s bomb disposal unit said they recovered several suicide vests, each equipped with six handmade grenades, during their December 24 raid on a militant hideout at Ashkona. One of the militants had blown herself up.

But new types of vests were recovered from Chittagong’s Sitakunda, Sylhet’s Atia Mahal, Moulvibazar’s Nasirnagar and Borohat, as well as at Jhenaidah and Chapainawabganj in March, the official said. “These vests had materials with higher destructive capacity.”

Who makes the explosives?
Not all active members of New JMB can make bombs and grenades, according to CTTC officials. Only some top level leaders – including Hatkata Mahfuz and Hadisur Rahman Sagar – are believed to possess the necessary expertise.

During the recent anti-militancy raid at Moulvibazar, there were rumours of a youthful bomb making expert who had returned from Afghanistan. But there was no concrete information to support the claim.

A CTTC officer said they recovered a number of masks from militant hideouts. “Some senior leaders, who were trained bomb makers, never showed their faces to the young members and wore these masks during meetings,” the officer added.
 
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Defence Technology of Bangladesh-DTB
Page Liked · 3 mins ·

নারায়ণগঞ্জের রূপগঞ্জের পূর্বাচল এলাকায় অভিযান চালিয়ে বিপুল পরিমাণ অস্ত্রশস্ত্র ও গোলাবারুদ উদ্ধার করেছে পুলিশ।
গতকাল বৃহস্পতিবার দিবাগত রাত থেকে অভিযান শুরু হয়। আজ শুক্রবারও অভিযান চলে।
অভিযানে দুটি রকেট লঞ্চার, অর্ধশতাধিক সাব মেশিনগান, পিস্তল, গুলি, ম্যাগাজিনসহ বিপুল অস্ত্রশস্ত্র ও গোলাবারুদ উদ্ধার হয়েছে।

অনেকে বলছেন এগুলো মার্কিন M-16 রাইফেল যা সম্পুর্ন ভুল....এগুলো চাইনিজ Type-81, AK-22 এবং চাইনিজ RPG.

যারা বলছেন M-16 এবং চ্যালেঞ্জ করতে চান তারা আমাদেরকে উদ্ধার করা অস্ত্র থেকেঅন্তত একটা M-16 এর ছবি দেখান।

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Qamrul Islam
30 mins ·
রূপগঞ্জের অস্ত্র উদ্ধার নাটক ফ্লপ!
প্রথম আলো পত্রিকা ফাটিয়ে দিয়েছে, র‌্যাবের সোর্স শরিফের বাড়িতে এটা একটা সাজানো ঘটনা!
ছি ছি ছি..........

wpns.jpg
 
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Qamrul Islam গোপালী দিদি, রকেট লঞ্চার নিয়া নাটক করো? শিয়ালরে ভাঙা বেড়া দেখাইতেছ তো? মনে রাখিও এই শিয়ালেই তোমাকে খাইবে। হে হে হে...
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Seven Indian companies supplying components to ISIS: Report

BY PTI UPDATED: FEB 26, 2016, 10.23 AM IST

Seven Indian companies are among those from 20 countries named in a list whose components were used by the ISIS to make explosives, a EU mandated study, suggesting that more work needs to be done to track the flow of chemicals and other items to the terror group.

The study by Conflict Armament Research (CAR) showed that 51 companies from 20 countries such as Turkey, India, Brazil, and the US produced, sold or received the over 700 components used by ISIS to build improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

Turkey topped the list of countries with a total of 13 firms involved in the supply chain. It was followed by India with seven companies, CAR said in a statement. The study was completed in 20 months.

Seven Indian companies manufactured most of the detonators, detonating cord and safety fuses. Under Indian law, transfer of this material requires a license. Those were all legally exported under government issued licenses from India to entities in Lebanon and Turkey, the CAR said.

According to the report, the terror group mostly uses Nokia 105 mobile phone for remote detonation.

Companies from Brazil, Romania, Russia, the Netherlands, China, Switzerland, Austria and Czech Republic were also involved, it said. The study said that governments and firms need to do more to track the flow of cables, chemicals and other equipment.

CAR's executive director James Bevan said, "these findings support growing international awareness that ISIS in Iraq and Syria are very much self sustaining acquiring weapons and strategic goods, such as IED components, locally and with ease.

The report said that CAR gained access to the components through partners including the USbacked Kurdish YPG in Syria, the Iraqi Federal Police, the Kurdistan Region Security Council and forces of the Kurdistan Regional Government. These components were seized during battles in the Iraqi towns of al Rabia, Kirkuk, Mosul, and Tikrit and the Syrian town of Kobani.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...isis-report/articleshow/51142301.cms?from=mdr
 
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Guns now enter the country in parcels
Customs-Intelligence4-690x450.jpg

In the past four years, BGB has seized 237 pistols, 26 revolvers, 152 guns, 5,159 rounds of bullets, 196 magazines, 60 bombs, three grenades, 47 crude bombs, 36kg of explosives and 69kg of gunpowder during smuggling CIID
In the first five months of this year, Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) seized 19 pistols, a revolver, and 26 different types of guns
The government has expressed concern about the recent trend of using courier services to ship illegal firearms from Myanmar and other countries into Bangladesh, sources in the security forces have revealed.

In the first five months of this year, Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) seized 19 pistols, a revolver, and 26 different types of guns.

Moreover in the past four years, BGB has seized 237 pistols, 26 revolvers, 152 guns, 5,159 rounds of bullets, 196 magazines, 60 bombs, three grenades, 47 crude bombs, 36kg of explosives and 69kg of gunpowder during smuggling.

Many of these illegal firearms and explosives were recovered from parcels sent using one of the country’s 50 licensed courier services.

“We ship thousands of parcels every day and it is very difficult to properly check each and every package individually,” Courier Services Association of Bangladesh Chairman Hafizur Rahman Pulok told the Dhaka Tribune.

He said they could check the parcels if the government provided them with scanners. “It will be easier for us to monitor then (but) scanners are costly and not all courier companies can afford them.”

“If the government provides scanners, it can then cancel licences of courier services or take legal action if any of the companies ship illegal goods. Otherwise, it will be very difficult to monitor the parcels.”

Intelligence agencies expressed their concerns about the matter in a recent meeting on combating money laundering at the Bangladesh Bank. They fear militants may take advantage of the situation and send firearms and explosives to different parts of the country without a hitch.

On June 30, for example, law enforcers arresting suspected firearms dealer Munirul Islam Chowdhury Mukul from Kutubdia in Cox’s Bazar recovered 19 firearms and 621 bullets from his possession.

RAB and BGB say most of these firearms come from Myanmar and are shipped to various places within Bangladesh.

Sources in the intelligence agencies said there were at least 119 points along the border through which firearms are smuggled. Majority of the shipments enter Bangladesh through border points in Chapainawabganj, Benapole, Satkhira, Comilla and Brahmanbaria.

Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal recently directed the authorities concerned to install sophisticated surveillance devices at the border and to be on the alert against the shipping of small firearms through courier services.

However, police headquarters Assistant Inspector General (media) Sahely Ferdous told the Dhaka Tribune that police cannot always check the covered vans for legal reasons. “But we check them thoroughly if we have specific information,” she added.

Abdul Halim, the managing director of licensed arms trader Smith and Anvil Limited, told the Dhaka Tribune that it was “simply impossible” for a licensed trader to send firearms via courier.

“We have to take the government’s permission to import firearms. Government authorities concerned check our shipment,” he said.

The Bangladesh Financial Intelligence Unit (BFIU) – which analyses suspicious transaction reports, information related to money laundering and terror financing – is arranging an inter-ministerial meeting on the matter. It says a coordinated effort is needed to stop illegal shipment of small arms and gunpowder.

http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/crime/2017/08/05/guns-enter-country-using-courier-services/
 
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indians created JMB, brought ISIS in Bangladesh using a hindu, providing arms to ISIS and sheltered them. It is now clear that indian intelligence organization, RAW, now operating in Japan (in other countries) recruiting for or in name of ISIS and that is how they recruited that hindu teacher to lead ISIS in Bangladesh.

Bangladesh bakery attack mastermind is hiding in India: Report
Krishnendu Bandyopadhyay & Dwaipayan Ghosh| TNN | Jul 15, 2016, 02.24 AM IST
HIGHLIGHTS
  • Bangladesh government is likely to share a dossier of missing youths with India
  • Reports claim the mastermind of the recent Dhaka attack is hiding somewhere in West Bengal
  • Over 100 youths, mostly in their 20s, are missing from Dhaka
Bangladesh Border Guards soon after the restaurant in Dhaka's Gulshan area was attacked on July 1
KOLKATA: A key aide to Bangladeshi PM Sheikh Hasina on Thursday indicated the government's willingness to share a dossier of "missing youths" with India, underlining the country's intent to jointly fight cross-border terror.

The comments by Gawhar Rizvi, a senior foreign affairs advisor to Hasina, follows a Dhaka Tribune report that claimed a key plotter in the July 1 Gulshan carnage slipped into West Bengal seven months before the attack. Investigators in Bengal have been on the lookout for a key JMB operative, Md Suleiman, whose name cropped up while questioning an IS operative Abu Al-Musa Al Bangali alias Musa arrested by the state CID from Burdwan 10 days ago. Suleiman was Musa's handler for the past two years.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...ding-in-India-Report/articleshow/53217792.cms
 
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