
CRPF constable Ranjan Lal has spent half-a-decade in Kashmir, but his brief tenure in Rampur town, some four hours away from the national capital, proved to be more fraught with risk.
Lal, who took several bullets on his body during the terrorist attack early on Tuesday, is being treated at the Sree Sai Hospital in Moradabad. He was struggling to recount the night’s events. “It was after 2 am,” Lal said, “We were near the railway line—me and another constable—when we heard movement in a tea shop next to the gateman’s cabin. Before we could investigate, the air was sprayed with bullets. I saw two of the attackers who were firing from AK-47 rifles. I fired back but they were quick on their feet and escaped through the gate.”
Lal said before he could open fire on the attackers, he had already been hit on his arms, shoulder and legs. “The pain was so intense that I fainted,” he said.
Lal could not explain how the assailants came so near. “Several vehicles had entered the centre. Their entry permits had been checked. Perhaps the attackers had parked their vehicle near their hiding spot,” he added. On the bed next to him was another official Kendarpal, who had been seriously injured.
Several shacks line the entrance to the CRPF camp. Locals said these shacks were illegal and may have served as a convenient hiding place for the intruders.
Rickshaw-puller Kishan, who was among those killed along with the seven CRPF men, was sleeping in one of these shacks.
Another witness to the night’s attack, Mamta, who lives a few shacks away, said, “I was sleeping with my children when I heard gunshots. I hid my children under quilts and stepped out after the sound from the shots had faded. I saw police vehicles swarming all over the place.”



