2002 Raghunath temple attacks
Template:Short description Template:Use Indian English Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Military navigation". 2002 Raghunath Temple bombings refers to two fidayeen attacks in 2002 on the Raghunath Temple in Jammu in India. Built by Maharaja Ranbir Singh in 1860, the Raghunath temple is dedicated to Hindu God Rama. Template:Violence against Hindus in independent India
March attack
The first attack occurred on 30 March 2002 when two suicide bombers attacked the temple. Eleven people including three security personnel were killed and 20 were injured.[1] The attack occurred around 10:20 AM when the terrorists arrived, fired at the guards, and killed them on the spot. The attackers stormed the temple, threw a grenade, and fired indiscriminately at the worshippers. After expending his ammunition one of the attackers who was wearing a suicide vest blew himself up.[2] Then Minister of State for External Affairs of India, Omar Abdullah, blamed Pakistan for the terrorist attacks on the Raghunath temple in Jammu and ruled out withdrawing troops from the border, saying Islamabad had done nothing to warrant it.[3]
November attack
A second attacked occurred on 24 November 2002[4][5] when two suicide bombers stormed the temple and killed 14 devotees and injured 45 others.[6][7] Witnesses said terrorists hurled grenades and fired indiscriminately on the heavily guarded Raghunath temple.[8][9] India blamed a Pakistan-based militant group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, for the attack. Deputy Prime Minister Lal Krishna Advani of India blamed the chief of the Lashkar-e-Taiba, Hafiz Muhammad Saeed for the attack. He was released shortly prior to the attack by the government of Pakistan.[10]
The personnel of Central Reserve Police Force Yatindra Nath Rai, Assistant Commandant, Dev Singh, Head Constable, E.G. Rao, Head Constable, T. A. Singh, Constable, and Late K. K. Pandey, Constable displayed conspicuous gallantry, courage and devotion to duty of a high order.[11] Late K K Pandey was posthumously awarded the President's Police Medal for Gallantry. Yatindra Nath Rai, Dev Singh, E. G. Rao and T. A. Singh were awarded the Police Medal for Gallantry.[11][12]
See also
List of terrorist incidents in Jammu and Kashmir
References
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- ↑ Foreign ultras storm Raghunath Temple, The Tribune, 2001-03-31
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- ↑ 10 Killed in Attack on Temple in Kashmir, The New York Times, 2002-11-25
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- ↑ Terrorists attack Jammu temples, 12 dead, The Times of India, 2002-11-24
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- ↑ a b Printed in The Gazette of India, 17 December 2005
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External links
- Pages with script errors
- 21st-century mass murder in India
- Mass murder in 2002
- Suicide bombings in India
- Suicide bombings in 2002
- Attacks on Hindu temples in Jammu and Kashmir
- Anti-Hindu violence in Kashmir
- 2000s in Jammu and Kashmir
- Terrorist incidents in India in 2002
- 2002 building bombings
- Mass shootings in Jammu and Kashmir
- Terrorist incidents in Jammu and Kashmir
- March 2002 in India
- November 2002 in India
- 2002 mass shootings in Asia
- 2002 murders in India
- Islamic terrorist incidents in 2002
- Hindu temple bombings