HomeNewsIndiaNagaland killings: Faulty intelligence may have caused botched army operations

Nagaland killings: Faulty intelligence may have caused botched army operations

Security forces opened fire on civilians killing 14 and injuring 11 more in Nagaland's Mon district in three consecutive incidents of firing

December 06, 2021 / 09:10 IST
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The security forces have “intense pressure” to deliver after the killing of Colonel Viplav Tripathi and his family, according to a report. (Representative image)
The security forces have “intense pressure” to deliver after the killing of Colonel Viplav Tripathi and his family, according to a report. (Representative image)

The Army operation that led to the killings of 14 civilians and injuring 11 more in Nagaland's Mon district may have happened because of faulty or half-baked intelligence coupled with mounting pressure to deliver results in counter-insurgency operations in the northeast.

The security forces have “intense pressure” to deliver after the killing of Colonel Viplav Tripathi and his family, reported The Times of India citing officials. Colonel Tripathi, his wife, son and four soldiers were killed by insurgents in a well-planned ambush in Manipur on November 13. It is said to be the deadliest ambush in the last six years, they said.

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Security forces opened fire on civilians killing 14 and injuring 11 more in Nagaland's Mon district in three consecutive incidents of firing, according to the police.

The first firing which killed six civilians, occurred when army personnel mistook coal mine workers returning home in a pick-up van singing songs in the evening on December 4, to be insurgents belonging to the Yung Aung faction of the banned outfit NSCN (K), about whose movements they had been tipped off.