ULFA-I claim that the number of 3 ‘big’ casualties in ‘India Drone Strike’ in Myanmar camps refused to operate. Bharat News

Guwahati: ULFA-I-led ULFA-I, the same name, about the banned anti-terrorist organization of the same name, co-established in 1979, claimed on Sunday that three of its senior members were killed by the Indian Army in a pre-don drone attacks targeted by the Indian Army in some “mobile camps” of Myanmar.The Army officially adjacent to the ULFA-I and the revolutionary People’s Front (RPF) of Manipur in a stretch of the Indo-Myanmar border, Longwa in Nagaland and Pangsu Pass in Arunachal Pradesh.The ULFA -I stated that the attacks came in the waves between 2 pm and 4 pm – which included more than 150 drones of Israel and French – and as a result the outfit lost rebel veterans Nayan Asom, Ganesh Asom and Pradeep Asom. The last two were killed in a second drone strike while attending Nayan’s funeral, while 19 members were injured, the outfit said.“There are no inputs with the Indian Army on such an operation,” the Ministry of Defense Prof. Lieutenant Colonel Mahendra Rawat told TOI in Guwahati.ULFA-I said in a statement, specifying that three drone attacks took place in a interval of two hours. The organization said that residents of the border belt in Arunachal Pradesh will test the attacks.Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma, who began his term in the office with an offer to talk to ULFA-I, and the state police denied any participation or knowledge of operations against the organization. He said that the claim of ULFA-I can be clarity as more information comes from the distance limit.A source in the security establishment confirmed the casualties at the ULFA-I camps in Myanmar, suggesting that the attacks could be the result of civil war in the country that could be with many ethnic armed groups in the heart of conflict with many ethnic armed groups.,The ongoing civil war there has continued to struggle, transferring the alliance and a general breakdown of state control in many areas, especially near the international border, “said the source.” In this environment, attacks on rebel camps – in which the ULFA is used by the I – may be born in Myanmar’s own ethnic organizations, or even myanmar military. ,The rebel organizations of the Northeast have registered a presence in Myanmar since the end of the eighties, which take advantage of the porous border and the ongoing struggle there.Indian security agencies have repeatedly expressed concern over the use of the Mymarij region by terrorists for the hit-and-run attacks in the Northeast. There are examples of unconfirmed Indian military action on terrorists across the border on many occasions.ULFA-I camps are called in the dense forests of teak, with additional bases in the Basti Basti, Hoyat Basti and Hakyat (opposite to the longing district of Arunachal). Some camps are near Pangmi Naga-Basa region, and are with the China-Myanmar border. The Manipur-based groups, including the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), KYKL and PREPAK, include Manipur outfits. RPF is the political wing of PLA.The NSCN-K (YA) faction is the headquarters and camps that are of teak in the Naga-multi-long areas, often within the radius of 6 to 10 km of other terrorist bases. The location keeps changing on the basis of what is happening on the Indian side. Ethnic Myaniaries factions and the country’s army are known to return them.