Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

2004 Teli Katha massacre

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Target
  
Muslims Gujjars

Weapons
  
Firearms

Perpetrators
  
Kashmir Militants

Total number of deaths
  
12

Attack type
  
Massacre

Non-fatal injuries
  
10

Date
  
26 June 2004

Location
  
Poonch district, India

2004 Teli Katha massacre was the killing of twelve sleeping Muslim Gujjars by Kashmir militants on 26 June 2004 in the village of Teli Katha (also called Tiali Katha by some sources) in Surankote tehsil in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir.

Contents

Background

A violent insurgency has been going on in Jammu and Kashmir since 1989. The militants had intermittently massacred villagers who did not support their cause. The state government had supplied arms to the villagers who had formed Village Defence Committees (VDC) so that they could protect themselves from the militants.

Attack

The villagers had been sleeping in their dhok. They were fired upon indiscriminately. The members of VDC returned fire forcing the militants to flee in 10–15 minutes and thereby saving many lives. The deceased include seven members of the VDC and their five children. Ten others including four women and three children were injured. The killings were thought to be revenge for the villagers co-operation with the Indian army during operation Sarp Vinash. Anger against the militants ran so high that villagers had previously refused to bury militants killed in this operation by the Indian army, claiming their crimes meant they had renounced Islam.

Aftermath

Investigations by the authorities that Zubair Masih of Lashkar-e-Taiba had led the group of militants who were responsible for the killings. In August 2004 security forces killed three militants suspected of involvement in this massacre.

References

2004 Teli Katha massacre Wikipedia