"Jihad has become our duty", last message of 16 year old Kashmiri suicide attacker

SRINAGAR - Two young Kashmiris, aged 16 and 21, were among the three suicide attackers who targeted the CRPF camp at Lethpora in Pulwama in the Valley on Sunday, resulting in death of five troopers <link>-- a fact people in law administration and security forces find worrying because instances of direct local involvement in such attacks is rare, Hindustan Times has reported.

The people added that instances of such involvement are few and far between, even across the 28-year long freedom campaign in the Valley -- not more than half-a dozen times, they said.

In April, 2000, 17-year-old boy Afaaq Ahmad Shah, resident of Khanyar in the state capital, carried out what is considered to be first suicide attack in the trouble-torn Valley, at the 15 Corps HQ.

The most recent instance where a local was found to be involved in a suicide mission, was in 2010 in the Lal Chowk attack.

“It is worrisome. The youth are ready to die in this manner,” said Jammu and Kashmir police chief SP Vaid .

Jaish-e-Mohammed, the group responsible for the Pulwama attack, justified using a minor as a suicide attacker saying the trio offered themselves for “the mission.”

Kashmiris have been “part of suicide missions” before but not in “majority” (two of three terrorists), said Sheikh Mushtaq, senior journalist and former Reuters Bureau Chief in Kashmir.

The two Kashmiris have have been identified as Fardeen Mohiuddin Khanday, 16, resident of Hiana in Tral and Manzoor Ahmad Baba, 21, resident of Drubgam in Pulwama.

Khanday, who is son of Jammu and Kashmir police head constable Ghulam Mohiuddin Khanday, left a 7.52 minutes video saying that by the time the video is released he would be in paradise'.

“Fardeen was known to the security establishment in the Valley as he was found to be in touch with a Jaish militant killed in March last year. Similarly, the second local suicide attacker, Manzoor Ahmad Baba used to drive a taxi before he joined Jaish on November 7, a day after another Jaish militant he was closely associated with was killed by security forces,” said a senior security forces official in Srinagar.

By releasing Fardeen’s video, Jaish seems to have taken a leaf out of book of global terror outfits such as al Qaeda and Islamic State, which regularly release video messages of their Fidayeens.

In his video message, Fardeen, speaking in Urdu, claims the “rise of militancy has nothing to do with unemployment as being portrayed by India''; It’s a reaction to ``Kashmir's occupation by India'' he adds.

``The Infidels have occupied our land, modesty of our women is at stake, so Jihad becomes our duty,'' he rants.