Indian team set to meet UN committee in push to list TRF as terror outfit
This is the first time since Operation Sindoor that New Delhi has raised TRF with the UN and its anti-terror bodies. This comes after Pakistan managed to get TRF’s name removed from the April 25 Security Council statement on the terror attack.
Pakistan’s pressure to remove references to TRF in the April 25 UNSC Press Statement was perceived as a giveaway that the group was behind the attack. (Photo: Reuters)
India has sent a team to the United Nations in an attempt to get The Resistance Front (TRF), the outfit suspected to be behind the Pahalgam attack, listed as a terrorist group.
A source said Wednesday: “An Indian technical team is in New York. They are interacting today with the Monitoring Team of the 1267 Sanctions Committee and other partner countries in the UN. They will also be meeting with the United Nations Office of Counter-Terrorism (UNOCT) and Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate (CTED).”
Indian officials, including Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, have said that TRF carried out the April 22 Pahalgam terror attack. They have called the group a “known front” for the UN-proscribed Pakistan-based terrorist organization, Lashkar-e-Taiba.
This is the first time since Operation Sindoor that New Delhi has raised TRF with the UN and its anti-terror bodies. This comes after Pakistan managed to get TRF’s name removed from the April 25 Security Council statement on the terror attack.
TRF claimed responsibility for the Pahalgam attack twice — within a few hours after the incident on April 22 and then again on the morning of April 23.
Misri had said that TRF backed off from the claim, perhaps only after the outfit’s leaders and handlers across the border realised the gravity of the attack. “Obviously that retraction doesn’t convince anybody,” Misri had said after India conducted strikes at nine terror locations in Pakistan, including LeT’s headquarters in Muridke.
India had given inputs about TRF in the half-yearly report to the Monitoring Team of the UN’s 1267 Sanctions Committee in May and November 2024, detailing its role as a cover for Pakistan-based terrorist groups. In December 2023, too, India had informed the monitoring team about the LeT and Jaish-e-Mohammad operating through small terror groups such as the TRF.
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Pakistan’s pressure to remove references to TRF in the Security Council statement was perceived as a giveaway that the country’s establishment was behind the attack.
Indian officials have said that investigations into the Pahalgam terror attack have brought out the communication nodes of terrorists with Pakistan. They have also said that the claims made by TRF and their reposting by known social media handles of the LeT speak for themselves.
Indian officials have time and again referred to the Security Council’s April 25 statement that talks of “the need to hold perpetrators, organisers, financiers and sponsors” accountable, and said that India’s actions should be seen in this context.
Shubhajit Roy, Diplomatic Editor at The Indian Express, has been a journalist for more than 25 years now. Roy joined The Indian Express in October 2003 and has been reporting on foreign affairs for more than 17 years now. Based in Delhi, he has also led the National government and political bureau at The Indian Express in Delhi — a team of reporters who cover the national government and politics for the newspaper. He has got the Ramnath Goenka Journalism award for Excellence in Journalism ‘2016. He got this award for his coverage of the Holey Bakery attack in Dhaka and its aftermath. He also got the IIMCAA Award for the Journalist of the Year, 2022, (Jury’s special mention) for his coverage of the fall of Kabul in August 2021 — he was one of the few Indian journalists in Kabul and the only mainstream newspaper to have covered the Taliban’s capture of power in mid-August, 2021. ... Read More