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The Jammu and Kashmir government on Friday, 22 February moved the Supreme Court seeking transfer of seven Pakistani terrorists from the Jammu jail to Tihar prison in Delhi on grounds that they were allegedly indoctrinating local prisoners.
A bench of Justices LN Rao and MR Shah sought a response from Centre and the Delhi government on the plea.
If not Tihar, they can be shifted to other high security prisons in Haryana and Punjab, he said.
To this, the bench said it will hear the matter and asked Alam to ensure that a copy of the notice is served to the seven terrorists also.
A day after the Pulwama attack on 14 February in which 40 CRPF personnel were martyred, the Jammu and Kashmir government had moved the apex court to shift a Lashkar-E-Taiba terrorist, Zahid Farooq, out of Jammu jail.
Farooq was arrested by security forces while trying to cross the border security fence on 19 May 2016.
The state government had said intelligence inputs received indicated that militants belonging to terror outfits like Jaish-e-Muhammad and LeT are indoctrinating the minds of other inmates lodged in the prison.
It was reliably learnt that the prisoner and other individuals have considerable local support and it cannot be ruled out that they may be receiving information, resources as well as other help to carry out terrorist-related activities, the state government added.
The state also sought shifting of the trial to Delhi saying it apprehends that transporting the militant to court and back to prison poses a threat to escorting policemen and common public.
Farooq's transfer from his current prison in Jammu and Kashmir to a high security prison outside the state is in the interest of national security, the government had said.
The effect of such radicalisation is that the brainwashed local youth who are inmates with these prisoners, are spreading the menace of terrorism and creating sympathisers by influencing, mobilising against the state, it said.
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