
THE safe conduct of the month-long Amarnath yatra, which begins in mid-July every year, has become something of an acid test of our security preparedness, not just in terms of the yatra itself but of J038;K as a whole. This is not only because of the huge numbers involved 8212; some 6,000 pilgrims on an average make their way to the Amarnath shrine high up in the mountains of the Lidder valley 8212; but because the pilgrimage route passes through the mountainous regions of Doda and Anantnag, which have traditionally been the hunting ground of militants. There is, besides, the unhappy history of hardships that pilgrims on this route in the past have endured, whether they were caused by natural calamities like landslides or through terrorist violence.
Tuesday8217;s grenade attack in Laizbal, Anantnag, on a taxi carrying pilgrims, may not have caused a large number of casualties, but it nevertheless underlined how even the cordon sanitaire along the route, comprising the army, the CRPF and the armed police, is no guarantee of a fail-proof security system. The ill-fated taxi had just happened to have slowed down while negotiating a speed-breaker, indicating that some preparation had gone into identifying the spot and preparing for the strike. Railing against the cowards who thought up this diabolic plan is pointless. Terrorists in Kashmir have long proved that they have lost any shred of humanity and will think nothing of attacking soft targets, unarmed men and women whose only reason for undertaking this arduous journey is their faith. Any civilised entity would term such action as unacceptable and abhorrent, but the enemy here does not understand the meaning of the word and one would have to take it as a given that terrorists will continue to target the yatra.