2002 Kaluchak Massacre refers to an incident on 14 May 2002 near the town of Kaluchak in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir when three terrorists attacked a tourist bus from the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh and killed 31 people.[1][2]
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On hearing the shots in the bus the Indian army soldiers fired in their direction. The terrorists who were dressed in Indian army fatigues, while returning fire, attempted to escape in the direction of the Army's family quarters, located on the main road. They also threw grenades on some vehicles parked in the vicinity. Upon entering the family quarters they again fired on Army family members present in the premises.The terrorists were eventually cordoned off and killed by 10 a.m.
There were a total of 31 killed, including 3 Army personnel, 18 Army family members and 10 civilians. There were 47 wounded including 12 Army personnel, 20 Army family members and 15 civilians.[3] The dead included ten children.[4]
All the three terrorists killed in this incident were Pakistani Nationals by Government of India. According to the Government, their names were Abu Suhail of Faislabad Pakistan, Abu Murshed (Mohammed Munir) of Salamatpura ( Rahwali Cantonment) Gujranwala Pakistan and Abu Javed (Amzad Salam Bin Mohammed Gisha) of Guda Giriya Gujranwala, Pakistan. The government sources stated that certain food items like biscuits and chocolates found on the persons of the gunmen revealed that they were purchased from Zafarwal, Pakistan.[3][5]
Indian Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee termed the massacre "a most inhuman and brutal carnage".[6] Hundreds of army personnel and their family members held candlelight prayers on Friday night in memory of those killed in one of the worst ever terrorist strikes in Jammu and Kashmir, in May.
Jaswant Singh, the then Minister for External Affairs, writes in his book A Call To Honour - In Service of Emergent India that the Kaluchak incident was the last straw that almost led to war between India and Pakistan (see 2001-2002 India-Pakistan standoff), and was the closest that Pakistan and India came to war.
Then Indian Union Minister of State for External Affairs Omar Abdullah blamed Pakistan for this massacre and argued for escalating the response against Pakistan because of the sheer barbarity of this attack.[7] Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir Farooq Abdullah also blamed Pakistani intruders calling them animals.[8]
Members of Parliament of India unanimously blamed Pakistan for this attack.[9]
The President of the United States George W. Bush condemned the massacre as a "terrible and outrageous act” and said that he was “appalled at the incident”.[10]
The Presidency of the European Union "strongly condemned the brutal terrorist attack in Kaluchak ( Jammu and Kashmir), which resulted in the death of numerous innocent civilians" and expressed sympathy to the Government of India for its problems in controlling terrorism in Kashmir.
Similar condemnations were expressed by the leaders of Germany, Japan and Russia.[10]
Pakistan arrested Lashkar-e-Taiba chief Hafiz Muhammad Saeed lending credence to the banned outfits connection with this attack.[3][4]
The Australian government while declaring Lashkar-e-Taiba a terrorist organization based in Muridke near Lahore, Pakistan in 2003 attributed this massacre to it.[11]