New Delhi: Pakistani terrorist Mohammad Naved Yakub, who was caught during the Udhampur attack, had performed security duty at a congregation of Jamat-ud-Dawa, headed by Mumbai terror attacks mastermind Hafiz Saeed, at Minar-e-Pakistan in Lahore in December last year.
According to a dossier prepared to be given to Pakistan during the now-cancelled NSA level talks, Naved had undergone arms training at a Lashkar-e-Taiba camp at a jungle near Muzaffarabad in Pakistan occupied Kashmir where a total of 40 trainees were lodged.
"Towards the end of this training, in early December 2014, Jamat-ud-Dawa held an 'ijtema' (congregation) at Minar-e-Pakistan, Lahore. All the trainees, including Naved were transported from Muzaffarabad to Lahore to perform security duties at the 'ijtema' venue. Naved was deployed close to the entrance of a pedestrian under-pass near Minar-e-Pakistan," the dossier says.
LeT founder Hafiz Saeed, who was the mastermind of 2008 Mumbai terror attacks, is chief of Jamat-ud-Dawa.
The dossier also named 17 Pakistanis who trained Naved in three different terror training courses in Pakistan since 2011 and 12 Pakistani terrorists who were trained along with him.
A mobile number of Zong service provider used by Naved in Pakistan is mentioned in the dossier. The government is planning to seek the US' help to procure call detail records of this number to give further proof that Naved is a Pakistani national.
Dismissing Pakistan's claim that Naved does not figure in its national database, India's dossier says an identity card was issued to Naved by the National Database and Registration Authority of Pakistan in 2014.
"Naved claims to have lost the card," the Indian dossier says, giving details of his family and even mentioning names of his three neighbours at Rafiq Colony in Faisalabad.
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