5 Indian Soilders Killed in Attack on Army Vehicles in Jammu and Kashmir Poonch
Defense News , India :- In a tragic incident on Thursday, heavily-armed terrorists ambushed two Army vehicles in the Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir, resulting in the loss of five soldiers and leaving two others injured, according to officials from news agency PTI. The attack unfolded at Dhatyar Morh, situated between Dhera Ki Gali and Bufliaz, around 3:45 pm.
Sources revealed to India Today TV that the terrorists strategically chose the Dhatyar Morh location for the attack, exploiting a blind curve and rough road to force the Army vehicles to slow down. Perched atop a hill at Dhatyar Morh, between Dhera Ki Gali and Bufliaz, the assailants unleashed a hail of bullets upon the two Army vehicles.
Reports suggest that the terrorists might have conducted reconnaissance at the attack site, where a truck and a Maruti Gypsy were ambushed. It is believed that three or four terrorists were involved in the assault, taking advantage of the vulnerability created by the blind curve.
The assailants targeted the Army vehicles precisely when they decelerated at the blind curve, demonstrating a calculated and ruthless approach.
Notably, the People Anti-Fascist Front (PAFF), an offshoot of the terror group JeM, was involved in this attack and had been banned by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs earlier in the year. PAFF, formed in 2019, has a history of engaging in terror activities in Jammu and Kashmir and other parts of the country.
The Home Ministry, in response to a question in the Rajya Sabha, outlined PAFFs involvement in radicalizing youth for recruitment and training in handling weaponry, issuing threats to Indian security forces, political leaders, and civilians in Jammu and Kashmir, and actively conspiring, both physically and on social media, to carry out violent terrorist acts.
Citing various acts of terrorism committed by PAFF in India, the Home Ministry, through a notification, declared PAFF a banned organization under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967. Notably, PAFF had previously claimed responsibility for a terror attack in April, resulting in the death of five Jawans in Poonch.