India Foils Major Terror Plot: J&K Police Seize 2,900 kg Explosive Material in Multi-State Raids

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Quick Read

  • The Jammu & Kashmir Police (J&K Police) announced the bust of a cross-state terror module linked to the banned groups Jaish‑e‑Mohammed (JeM) and Ansar Ghazwat‑ul‑Hind (AGuH). Over 2,900 kg of IED-making material, along with arms and chemicals, were seized during coordinated raids.
  • Seven people—including two doctors—were arrested in raids across Jammu & Kashmir, Haryana (Faridabad), and Uttar Pradesh (Saharanpur) as part of the operation.
  • The network is described by investigators as a “white-collar terror ecosystem”, involving radicalised professionals and students, with links to handlers abroad. 

What Happened & How

Investigators began tracing the network after terror propaganda posters of JeM and AGuH appeared in Nowgam, on the outskirts of Srinagar, in mid-October.  Following digital leads, law-enforcement agencies executed coordinated raids between 8-10 November in J&K (Srinagar, Anantnag, Ganderbal, Shopian) and in Haryana (Faridabad), uncovering huge quantities of explosives and weaponry. Seized items included assault rifles, pistols, ammunition, and remarkable amounts of chemicals and IED components (remote-controls, timers, wiring) totalling 2,900 kg.

Where & When

The operation spanned multiple states: Jammu & Kashmir (Srinagar, etc.), Haryana (Faridabad), and parts of UP. It culminated in the early part of November 2025—in particular, the days 8-10 November

Why It Matters

  • The size of the haul and the involvement of professionals (doctors, students) show that terror logistics are no longer limited to traditional militant cells—they’re moving into covert, educated networks.
  • Seizing nearly 3 tonnes of explosive material greatly weakens the operational planning capability of the involved terror outfits and shows the intelligence and coordination strength of security agencies.
  • The case underscores risks of radicalisation in unexpected sectors, needing a broader strategy beyond conventional counter-insurgency.

What’s Next

Investigators will focus on:

  • Tracing the funding routes and foreign handlers of the module.
  • Testing every seized item for forensic links to any past or planned attacks.
  • Expanding surveillance of professionals suspected of aiding terror modules and enforcing tighter controls on precursor chemicals and explosives.

This successful foiling of a major terror plot marks a significant disruption of hostile networks trying to operate across state borders. The intelligence breakthrough sends a strong message: even deeply embedded, well-funded terror setups can be tracked and dismantled when agencies collaborate.

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