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ULFA's Rajkhowa arrested in Bangladesh, say sources

Indo-Asian News Service
Guwahati, December 02, 2009
First Published: 13:00 IST(2/12/2009)
Last Updated: 15:00 IST(2/12/2009)


Arabinda Rajkhowa, chairman of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), and its publicity secretary Apurba Baruah have been arrested in Bangladesh, informed sources said on Wednesday.

Both are expected to be in India's custody soon, the sources told IANS.

The two leaders are believed to have been arrested by the Special Branch of the Bangladesh Police from downtown Dhaka.

Rajkhowa, 56, was in Bangladesh for close to two decades, operating out of bases in that country to order hit-and-run strikes in Assam.

He founded the ULFA in 1979 along with five other leaders, including the outfit's commander-in-chief Paresh Baruah, who is believed to have escaped Bangladesh and is reportedly hiding in China.

Last month, Bangladesh reportedly handed over two ULFA leaders, self-styled foreign secretary Sasha Choudhury and finance secretary Chitrabon Hazarika, to Indian authorities.


Indian officials say they were arrested on the India-Bangladesh border in Tripura while trying to sneak into India.

ULFA's Rajkhowa arrested in Bangladesh, say sources- Hindustan Times
 
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ULFA's Rajkhowa arrested in Bangladesh, say sources

Indo-Asian News Service
Guwahati, December 02, 2009
First Published: 13:00 IST(2/12/2009)
Last Updated: 15:00 IST(2/12/2009)


Arabinda Rajkhowa, chairman of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), and its publicity secretary Apurba Baruah have been arrested in Bangladesh, informed sources said on Wednesday.

Both are expected to be in India's custody soon, the sources told IANS.

The two leaders are believed to have been arrested by the Special Branch of the Bangladesh Police from downtown Dhaka.

Rajkhowa, 56, was in Bangladesh for close to two decades, operating out of bases in that country to order hit-and-run strikes in Assam.

He founded the ULFA in 1979 along with five other leaders, including the outfit's commander-in-chief Paresh Baruah, who is believed to have escaped Bangladesh and is reportedly hiding in China.

Last month, Bangladesh reportedly handed over two ULFA leaders, self-styled foreign secretary Sasha Choudhury and finance secretary Chitrabon Hazarika, to Indian authorities.


Indian officials say they were arrested on the India-Bangladesh border in Tripura while trying to sneak into India.

ULFA's Rajkhowa arrested in Bangladesh, say sources- Hindustan Times

CNN-IBN reported today that they will extradited to India soon.. Any way its a good news for India ..Good going Bangladesh..You are in news for all the good reasons now a days :cheers:..
 
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At Times No i Heard that hes going to be handed to India very soon.

Thank You Bangladesh.
This is a Real Anti-Terrorrism Co-Operation.

Certainly it will boost our Ties.
 
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Bravo Bangladesh!!! They have started acting against Anti-India forces. End of ULFA is near.

We expect similar cooperation from Pakistan.
 
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Guwahati: Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi on Thursday stopped short of admitting the arrest of Arabinda Rajkhowa, chairman of the outlawed United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), but confirmed that a 'breakthrough' has been made.

"I cannot say how the breakthrough has happened, but all I can say is that a breakthrough has happened and maybe within the next few days or next few hours you would know the whereabouts of Arabinda Rajkhowa," said Gogoi.

Gogoi's statement has virtually confirmed that one of India's most wanted separatist leaders is in the government’s custody.

"We are hopeful of getting some good news very soon and the developments are moving in the right direction. The signals are encouraging," Gogoi said.

Intelligence officials on Wednesday claimed to have taken custody of 53-year-old Rajkhowa after he was reportedly arrested by Bangladeshi security forces and handed over to Indian authorities.

"All I can say is that the ULFA can discuss anything, all issues, except their demand of sovereignty, when they hold peace talks with the government," Gogoi said.

"We on our part are ready to do anything and even release jailed ULFA leaders if the talks progress well and if their release is required to smoothen the peace process."

There are now indications that New Delhi is planning to offer safe passage to the ULFA leader instead of showing him as arrested to facilitate formal peace talks with the outfit, which has been fighting for an independent homeland in Assam since 1979.

"If they want safe passage, we are ready to give. All these issues can be discussed and worked out," the chief minister said.

The Chief Minister, however, rejected media reports of the arrest of Ranjan Daimary, leader of the outlawed National Democratic Front of Bodoland (NDFB) in Bangladesh.

The NDFB was blamed for the October 30, 2008 serial explosions that killed some 100 people in Assam.

ULFA down; CM offers peace talks
 
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Government was expecting a big split in ULFA ranks after the arrest of its `chairman' Arabinda Rajkhowa in Bangladesh. In a boost to India's campaign against ULFA, cops in Bangladesh arrested Rajkhowa, in a development which can potentially deepen the division in the rank of the outfit over whether to hold negotiations with India.

Backroom parleys are on to get Rajkhowa back to India from Bangladesh which under Sheikh Haseena Wajed has been more appreciative of India's worries about the insurgent and terrorist groups targeting India from its soil.

In fact, the Bangladesh authorities also arrested Biswa Mohan Deb Barman, president of National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT), another outlawed secessionist outfit active in the northeast, from Chittagong on Monday.

Rajkhowa's arrest comes at a time when a section of ULFA leadership has responded to Centre's feelers for "unconditional" talks in teeth of opposition from Paresh Baruah, the `commander-in-chief' who is determined to carry on with the insurgency that involves deliberate attacks on innocent civilians.

The `chairman' of ULFA is said to be among those who favoured talks and has sent peace feelers to the government. He does not command the loyalty of ULFA's armed units. Yet, the fact that he, one of the founding-members of ULFA, is the `chairman' of the group makes him a big catch.

Speaking in the Rajya Sabha just after the news of Rajkhowa's detention came in, home minister P Chidambaram said that he expected a big statement from ULFA. The home minister, without mentioning Rajkhowa or his arrest said: "ULFA is in disarray today. In next few days, the ULFA leadership will make a political statement. Our government is prepared to talk to ULFA provided they abjure violence and there is no demand for sovereignty."

Besides enhancing the chances of talks with a section of ULFA, the arrest of Rajkhowa, as well as that of Barman, are a good augury for India for another important reason. They mark a desire on the part of Bangladesh to heed India's security concerns. The neighbouring country has become a safe haven as well as launch pad for jehadi groups as well as secessionist outfits from India's northeast.

Just a few days ago, Bangladesh Police had arrested two other top leaders of ULFA leaders -- Sashadhar Choudhary (outfit's `foreign secretary') and Chitrabhan Hazarika. T Nasir, a Lashkar jehadi, was also arrested and handed over to the Indian authorities.

Nasir, one of the accused in the Bangalore serial blasts of last year who hails from Kerala, was quietly handed over to Border Security Force (BSF) personnel along the Indo-Bangla border late Tuesday night. He was arrested in the wake of FBI's input to Bangladesh about LeT's plan to carry out attacks on the US embassy and the Indian high commission in Dhaka last month. FBI had unearthed the LeT plan after interrogating the terror duo -- David Coleman Headley and Tahawwur Hussain Rana -- in Chicago for plotting attacks on India and Denmark.

It is learnt that the Indian agencies have now been trying to get Rajkhowa, Deb Barman and others back just as they got hold of Nasir and others, without getting into the nitty-gritty of long deportation/extradition procedures.

Another ULFA activist Bhaity Barua was also picked up along with Rajkhowa.

Fifty-three-year-old Rajkhowa was among a few top leaders who had founded the outfit in April 1979. With Rajkhowa's arrest, ULFA is only left with Paresh Baruah and his deputy Raju Baruah who are learnt to be shuttling from one place to another in China, Malaysia, Thailand and Bangladesh. Another top leader Anup Chetia is currently in Bangladesh jail and is awaiting extradition to India.

Sources said Rajkhowa's wife Kaberi Kachari and their two sons were placed under house arrest in Dhaka. The detained ULFA `chairman' is the son of a freedom fighter, Umakanta Rajkonwar, who died a few years ago. Accused in several cases, including that of waging war against India, Rajkhowa has an Interpol Red Corner Notice against him. He has been out of India since 1992 and is said to have lived in places like Myanmar, Thailand and Bhutan apart from Bangladesh.

Days after these arrests, India and Bangladesh on Wednesday finalised drafts of three key treaties which will be signed when Sheikh Hasina arrives here later this month.

Drafts of the agreements on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters, Transfer of Sentenced Persons (like Chetia) and bilateral agreement on Combating International Terrorism, organised crime and illicit drug trafficking were finalised during the three-day meeting of home secretaries of India and Bangladesh.

"Both sides agreed to develop mechanisms to further hasten the process of verification of nationality status of prisoners lodged in jails of either country, particularly of those who have completed their sentence, to enable their early repatriation," Bangladesh home secretary Abdus Sobhan Sikder told reporters here.

Indian home secretary G K Pillai: "Both sides condemn terrorism in all its forms and manifestations and reaffirmed their commitment not to allow the use of territory of either country for any activity inimical to each other's interests."

Both Pillai and Sikder, however, pleaded ignorance about the detention of Rajkhowa. Pillai said: "We also have no official information of arrest of Arabinda Rajkhowa in Bangladesh or anywhere else."

The home secretary, however, thanked the Bangladesh government for its cooperation on different issues specially for timely action to prevent the attack on the Indian mission in Bangladesh.

Asked about reports of militants setting up bases in Bangladesh, Sikder said his country did not harbour any elements which were inimical to India.

He said: "Bangladesh's position is clear. It does not support or harbour any terrorist or organisation. We do not allow any elements to use our soil. We have arrested a number of militants belonging to different outfits in the past."

On the possibility of launching joint operations against militants, Pillai said: "No such discussion has taken place during the talks".

Both India and Bangladesh reaffirmed their resolve to take immediate action on the basis of real time and actionable information and agreed to redouble efforts to locate subjects of Red Corner Notices in either country.


ULFA `chairman' Arabinda Rajkhowa held in Bangladesh - India - The Times of India
 
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Bangladesh acting against northeastern terrorists: Tripura chief minister


Bangladesh has been taking action against terrorists from India's northeast, Tripura Chief Minister Manik Sarkar said here Thursday, a day after top ULFA leader Ababinda Rajkhowa was reported to have been taken into custody there.

"Setting their base in Bangladesh, the outlawed guerrillas continue to carry out violent attacks in northeastern India. In view of the Bangladesh government operation, the strength of the northeast militants has been gradually reducing," Sarkar told reporters.

"A large number of ultras have surrendered to the government this year and no youths are willing to join militancy nowadays."

To a question about arrest or detention of self-styled United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa and National Liberation Front of Tripura (NLFT) supremo Biswamohan Debbarma by Bangladeshi security forces, Sarkar said Tripura police have been looking into the matter and collecting information.

"We have no official confirmation yet about the arrest of the two top insurgent leaders," Sarkar added.

Sarkar, who holds the home portfolio, said: "Tripura is the first Indian state which had provided the details (to Dhaka through New Delhi) about the northeast insurgents taking shelter in Bangladesh."

Meanwhile, the Tripura government has asked the central intelligence agencies to confirm media reports from Dhaka about the arrest of wanted northeast India terrorist leader in Bangladesh.

Director General of Tripura Police Pranay Sahaya told IANS: "We have asked the RAW (Research and Analysis Wing) and IB (Intelligence Bureau) to verify the media reports about the detention of NLFT chief Biswamohan Debbarma by the Bangladeshi security forces."

"Following the request of the Tripura police and the union home ministry, a 'Red Corner' notice was earlier issued by the Interpol to arrest Debbarma, 43, a politician turned militant leader."

"We are awaiting the reports and confirmation from the central intelligence agencies," the Tripura Police chief said.

Debbarma, who had been leading the NLFT for the past two decades, was wanted by the Indian security agencies in connection with cases relating to violence, murder, kidnapping, use of arms and explosives. He was also carrying a reward of Rs.400,000 besides an Interpol arrest warrant.

The NLFT is a banned rebel group fighting for an independent tribal homeland and operates out of Bangladesh.

Quoting intelligence agencies, a section of national television channels and leading Tripura newspapers, including ruling Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPI-M) mouthpiece Daily Desher Katha, have reported that Debbarma was arrested by Bangladeshi security forces at Bandarban in southeastern Bangladesh Saturday.

According to Sahaya, over 340 tribal guerrillas of the All Tripura Tiger Force (ATTF) and NLFT, including some carrying cash rewards and with Interpol arrest warrants against them, have fled from their Bangladeshi camps and surrendered to Indian security forces this year.

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Ulfa deputy C-in-C also in net?

ULFA chairman Arabinda Rajkhowa's arrest in Dhaka has understandably hogged the limelight. But intelligence agencies here are equally interested in Hitesh Kalita, one of the three others arrested with Rajkhowa and handed over to BSF at Gokulnagar in Tripura on Wednesday.

The other two are ULFA's key publicity wing member Apurba Barua and Biswamohan Deb Barma, chairman of National Liberation Front of Tripura.

Hitesh Kalita is believed to be the alias of Raju Barua, the ULFA's dreaded deputy commander-in-chief and military spokesman. Though next to the outfit's armed wing commander Paresh Barua in the ULFA's hierarchy, Raju Barua is said to be the outfit's main weapons manager besides having overseen major subversive operations until ill-health forced him to lie low a couple of years back.

"There's a fifty per cent chance of Hitesh Kalita actually being Raju Barua. We will get to know for sure when the arrested ULFA men are brought to Guwahati possibly within the next 48 hours," said a senior Special Branch officer. "If Kalita is the real McCoy, the ULFA is as good as dead."

Raju Barua, intelligence officials said, has been the ULFA's main schemer. His modus operandi included propping up lesser outfits such and striking strategic deals with tribal militant groups. The Kamtapur Liberation Organizion, which wants a separate homeland for the Koch-Rajbongshi community in areas straddling West Bengal and Assam, is said to have been Barua's initiative. He also was the brain behind ULFA's axis with National Democratic Front of Bodoland and outfits of Tripura, Manipur and Nagaland.

"If we have Raju Barua along with Rajkhowa, Paresh Barua will be on his own, what with ULFA's secretary Anup Chetia in the grips of the Bangladesh government and deputy chairman Pradip Gogoi languishing in Guwahati jail," the officer said.

The "beginning of the ULFA's possible end" began last month with the arrest of its "finance secretary" Chitrabon Hazarika and "foreign secretary" Sashadhar Choudhury. The two were handed over to BSF in Tripura by Bangladesh authorities.


Ulfa deputy C-in-C also in net?- Hindustan Times
 
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Ulfa rebel confirms camps in Myanmar

SHILLONG: A hardcore Ulfa militant on Tuesday revealed that at least three camps of the banned outfit, housing over 100 rebels, are still active in Myanmar. Not only that, they have close nexus with the NSCN (K) as well, he said.

Gobin Ojha alias Kiran Jyoti Gogoi, who has been one of the key inmates in the camps having several rebels under his command, surrendered at the BSF's Assam-Meghalaya Frontier headquarters here along with a Karbi Longri National Liberation Front (KLNLF) militant, Arun Terong.

The duo, involved in extortion, bomb blasts, kidnapping and killings, handed over two pistols and a few rounds of ammunition before BSF IG Prithvi Raj on the occasion of the force's (Assam & Meghalaya Frontier) 45th Rising Day.

The Ulfa militant later told newspersons that about 110 rebels, including some women, belonging to the outfit's 28th battalion were living in a pathetic condition at the three camps in the jungles of Myanmar. "They don't get proper food and medicines. Life's very difficult there," Gobin said.

"Bijoy Das, the commander of Ulfa's 28th battalion, was also operating from one of those camps," he added. "The Khaplang faction of NSCN, too, has camps in the area and both the groups had a close nexus," said Gobin, a native of Assam's Sivasagar district who had joined Ulfa in 2005.

Incidentally, the Ulfa's 28th battalion had owned up to the recent attack on a train in Assam's Golaghat district. Sixteen wagons of the train, carrying high-speed diesel from Numaligarh Oil Refinery to Panki in Uttar Pradesh, were destroyed in the blast.

On the other hand, Terong, the KLNLF militant, was the bodyguard of the outfit's general secretary and was involved in two bomb blasts at the Diphu railway station and another in front of a temple, also in Diphu, Karbi Anglong, in November, 2007.

Ulfa rebel confirms camps in Myanmar - Guwahati - City - The Times of India
 
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Excellent news. Reminds me of Dying days of Khalistan Movement. One more insurgency down the drain.......whats next........

Not so soon bro...Indian agencies has to be on high alert..they will retaliate for sure..and dunno may be they choose another leader already
 
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Not so soon bro...Indian agencies has to be on high alert..they will retaliate for sure..and dunno may be they choose another leader already
Khalistan movement died with Bhindarawala.....LTTE died with Prabhakaran.....the second hand leadership is of no use.
 
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Next is Kashmir end of story.

That will happen soon......first you kill the terrorists......then you snattch away their support system.....and this is how you kill an insurgency.....slowly.......slowly.....inch by inch......induce masses to hate the terrorist..and then kill those terrorists.
 
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