'We have seen how quickly terror groups evolve across the globe', said Navy Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba.
Weeks
after the Pulwama attack, Navy
Chief Admiral Sunil Lanba on Tuesday warned that there are
reports about terrorists being trained to carry out operations
through the sea.
Addressing
a gathering of global experts at the Indo-Pacific Regional Dialogue
here, Lanba said the Pulwama
attack was perpetrated by extremists that were "aided by a
State" that seeks to destabilise India.
"We
also have reports of terrorists being trained to carry out operations
in various modus operandi, including through the medium of the sea,"
he said.
The
26/11 attack was carried out by 10 sea-borne terrorists of the
Lashkar-e-Taiba, who hijacked an Indian fishing trawler to reach
Mumbai and unleash mayhem.
The
Navy chief said this part of the world had witnessed multiple forms
of terrorism in recent years and few countries in the region had been
spared.
The
global nature that terrorism has acquired in the recent times has
further enhanced the scope of this threat, Lanba said.
India,
however, faces a "far more serious" version of
"state-sponsored" terrorism, he said.
"We
recently saw the horrific scale of the extremist attack in Jammu and
Kashmir about three weeks ago. This violence was perpetrated by
extremists aided and abetted by a State that seeks to destabilise
India," the Navy chief said without naming Pakistan.
On
February 14, a suicide bomber of the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed
(JeM) rammed an explosive-laden vehicle into a bus in Jammu and
Kashmir's Pulwama district, killing 40 Central Reserve Police Force
(CRPF) personnel.
"We
have seen how quickly terror groups evolve across the globe. A
particular brand of terror can well become a global problem in near
future," Lanba warned.
The
Indian security establishment is continuously working to address this
menace, he said, noting that "it is imperative that the global
community works in concert to contain and eliminate terrorism in all
its forms".
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