After losing the "brilliant" officer Lt Col Niranjan EK, the NSG has now decided to revise its Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) for defusing bombs and Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs), a senior NSG official said here today.
"Recently, we had an incident at Pathankot where a grenade was used as a booby trap and unfortunately NSG lost one of its brilliant officers. In this case, everything that was there in SOP was followed but the terrorists used an innovative thing which somehow was not included in the SOP and that perhaps led to this unfortunate incident.
The NSG Director General (DG), however, maintained that Niranjan, an experienced and highly-trained Commanding Officer of the Bomb Disposal and Detection Unit, had followed all laid down SOPs while sanitising the bodies of the four terrorists, killed in the attack on IAF base on January 3.
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According to senior officials of the NSG bomb data centre, Niranjan was probably the only officer who had a wide-range of experience in conducting back-to-back anti-sabotage and sanitisation checks on live bombs, including defusing IEDs found in Patna and Bodh Gaya in Bihar, Bangalore and Burdwan in West Bengal.
While the DG said the NSG had taken along a "plenty" of
bomb suits to the IAF airbase under attack, Niranjan was wearing only a bullet-proof jacket as per the SOP.
"The same SOP was followed on the body of third terrorist. It was first approached by a person wearing bomb suit, but the booby trap on his body did not go off. This is actually what happened.
"In fact, it was a tightly packed grenade in the ammunition pouch which went off in his (Niranjan's) right hand after its lever was pressed, the moment it was taken off from the terrorist's body," Tayal said.
Addressing the seminar, the DG said threat of IEDs to the lives of civilians and security forces personnel is going to be "very high" in India and other parts of the world as this technique of killing and maiming people is a "no risk, high return" activity on the part of the terrorists and has also become their preferred weapon.
He said the modern-day terror mind was learning such techniques from easily available resources over the internet.
"In India, we live in a dangerous neighbourhood where terror incidents have increased exponentially and this region has become a terror hot-spot. I am saying this because there is hardly any day when we don't have an IED blast or a terrorist incident in our neighbourhood. When I talk about neighbourhood, I am including the area which are influenced by ISIS menace," he said.
He said as state police forces are the first responders in the incidents of terror attacks or when an IED is found in a busy place, the NSG has trained a number of them and have tried to address the "gaps" in their capacities.