The Lover Boy of Bahawalpur : How the Pulwama Case was Cracked

Author:

Rahul Pandita

Publisher:

Juggernaut

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Publisher

Juggernaut

Publication Year 2021
ISBN-13

9789391165109

ISBN-10 9391165109
Binding

Hardcover

Number of Pages 212 Pages
Language (English)
Weight (grms) 310

Inside the world of the Jaish-e-Mohammed – from the Parliament attack to the Pulwama bombing


In February 2019 one of the worst terror attacks on India takes place in Pulwama in Kashmir. Forty Indian soldiers are dead. But when the NIA probes the bombing they hit one dead end after another. Who were the actual masterminds of this audacious strike? It seemed impossible to find out.


In this thrilling and deeply reported book, the award-winning author and journalist Rahul Pandita tells the story of how a team of extraordinary NIA sleuths cracks the case one jigsaw piece at a time. Against all odds, they manage to connect the dots between a seemingly routine troublemaker put in preventive detention at the time of the abrogation of Article 370, a mobile phone full of lustful messages recovered after an encounter that killed a terrorist and the Pulwama attack itself. The sinister roots of the strike, they would discover, are several decades deep and can be traced to one man – Masood Azhar – and the empire of terror he created in Kashmir.


In this book we enter the terrifying world of radical Islamists and secret militant operations, of intelligence agencies and elite counter-terrorism units. With never-before-published details about the Pulwama case, the resultant Balakot strike and the arcane world of terror groups, this is one of the most significant works on Kashmir and terrorism in recent times.

Rahul Pandita

Rahul Pandita is the author of the best-selling Our Moon Has Blood Clots: A memoir of a lost home in Kashmir and the co-author of the critically-acclaimed The Absent State. He has reported extensively from war zones including Iraq and Sri Lanka. He has previously word with The Hindu, Open Magazine, among other media organisations. He is a 2015 Yale World Fellow. --This text refers to an alternate

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