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Police say they foiled attack in Indian Kashmir
By ZORAWAR SINGH JAMWAL,Associated Press Writer AP - Wednesday, December 24
JAMMU, India - India has arrested three suspected Islamic militants _ including a Pakistani soldier _ accused of planning a suicide attack in Indian-controlled Kashmir, police said Tuesday.
The arrests come amid rising tensions and increasing pressure from India on Pakistan to crack down on militant groups operating from its territory in the wake of the Mumbai attacks.
The suspects are members of Jaish-e-Mohammed, one of more than a dozen groups that have been fighting since 1989 to oust India from Kashmir, Kuldeep Khoda, director-general of police in Indian Kashmir, told reporters.
The Himalayan region _ the source of much of the tension between India and Pakistan _ is divided between the two nations and claimed in its entirety by both.
Khoda said police do not yet know the intended target of the attack, but he said the three men "had received specialized training in suicide attacks and driving explosive-laden vehicles."
One of the men, identified as Ghulam Farid, is a Pakistani soldier serving in the Azad Kashmir, or Free Kashmir, regiment, said Khoda, who provided his army service number.
There was no immediate response from the Pakistani army.
The men were detained Sunday after checking into a hotel in Jammu, a predominantly Hindu city in Jammu-Kashmir, India's only Muslim majority state. They were waiting to receive arms and explosives when they were arrested, Khoda said.
He said the men apparently had illegally entered India from Bangladesh and were detained after police received a tip-off about their location.
If Farid is proven to be an active Pakistani soldier, it would be a blow for Pakistan, which denies funding and training the Kashmiri militant groups and says it only provides them with moral support.
Another Pakistan-based Kashmiri group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, has been blamed for the Mumbai attacks in which 164 people and nine of the 10 accused gunmen were killed.
On Monday, India gave Pakistan a letter reportedly written by Mohammed Ajmal Kasab, the only gunman captured after the Mumbai rampage. Kasab wrote that all the gunmen involved in the Nov. 26 attack came from Pakistan, India's Foreign Ministry said. He also requested a meeting with Pakistani envoys, the ministry said.
Islamabad has not acknowledged that Kasab is Pakistani and has said it is waiting for proof of his citizenship before answering India's demands that it turn over wanted Lashkar leaders.
Pakistan has moved against both Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jamaat-ud-Dawa, a charity that India and the international community say is a front for Lashkar, but has repeatedly called on India to provide more evidence related to the attacks.
Pakistan has also said that if its citizens are found to be involved, they will be tried in Pakistan.
Since gaining independence from Britain in 1947, India and Pakistan have fought two of their three wars over Kashmir. A peace process begun in 2004 has eased relations between the nuclear-armed rivals, but these ties have been strained by the Mumbai attacks.
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