Statesman News Service
The Statesman
June 24, 1999.
Title: The blast was waiting to happen Author: Statesman News Service Publication: The Statesman Date: June 24, 1999. SILIGURI, June 23. - Local authorities, wishing to remain unidentified, confided to The Statesman today that they had been alerted, through "official channels" about an impending terrorist attack in North Bengal, similar to the one in New Jalpaiguri station yesterday. The fact that the attack "was waiting to happen" raises questions about the authorities' preparedness. Yesterday's explosion showed it was totally wanting. According to a railway security officer who witnessed the explosion, there had been no recent instructions to beef up security at the station. The question becomes more pointed in the light of the incident at Falakata in Cooch Behar, where bombs had been found under the railway tracks, just a day earlier. Sources in intelligence asserted that North Bengal was no longer a "corridor" for ISI agents. Rather, the region had turned into a base for foreign subversives. Delhi police had arrested a ISI agent, Syed Abu Nasir, on 7 January. Nasir had been pushed into Siliguri from Bangladesh by the ISI, a Union home ministry report was to reveal later. Nasir was interrogated by the FBI, on the suspicion that he was preparing to bomb US embassies in India at the behest of Osama bin Laden. He was found to have "good access" to Azam Cheema and Zaki-ur-Rehman, top leaders of Lashkar-e-Toiba. Members of the militant outfit are believed to be among the intruders in Kargil. Only last December, a group of 13 Pakhtoon money lenders was picked up from Siliguri on suspicion of being ISI agents. Subsequently, a couple of locals were arrested, also on the suspicion that they were acting as ISI agents: a girl studying law at North Bengal University, and a school teacher from Bagdogra. The latter was arrested only last week. The ISI's modus operandi is to lure prospective agents with money and "nice things of life", the sources said. If later these people are unwilling, they are blackmailed into working for the agency. There are so many ISI agents in the area, the sources said, that they could have easily executed the bomb attack on their own - without any help from the Ulfa or any other outfit seeking self-determination. The Kishanganj-Islampur area, the chicken neck measuring about 25 km in width, is "saturated" with ISI men, sources say. A madrassa in Kishanganj has been attracting a lot of attention lately for its "suspicious" activities. The madrassa, reportedly out of bounds for outsiders, has been getting a lot of foreign funds. It is also said to have bought land close to Siliguri. The large number of illegal migrants from the neighbouring country makes the area a happy hunting ground for the ISI. The demographic pattern has undergone a significant change in the past few years because of the influx, thanks to political parties and their "vote banks". In Siliguri, the areas "under surveillance" include Champasari, Dangipara, the latter being in the heart of the town. The North Bengal corridor became "more busy" after the ISI began to shift bases to Nepal from Bangladesh, in the wake of New Delhi's improving relations with Dhaka. The demographic pattern in the Terai-Nepal region, including Damak, has reportedly changed markedly too. But the most distressing piece of information is that the ISI has also made a base in Jorethang, a town bordering Sikkim and Bengal. Sources say the Pakistani intelligence agency is pushing its operations into Sikkim, getting closer to the Chinese border.
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