New Delhi: Maulana Masood Azhar, the chief of Jaish-e-Mohammed group, whose terror academy in Balakot faced a blitzkrieg from Indian Air Force jets early Tuesday, is a fugitive released by India in exchange of passengers of the hijacked Indian Airlines plane IC-814 in 1999 and has since been a blue-eyed boy of Pakistan's external snooping agency ISI.
Nearly 20 years after his release, during which he staged some audacious terror attacks in Jammu and Kashmir and hinterland, his Balakot camp was in the cross hairs of Mirage 2000 jets which clinched spectacular air attack on the resort-like facility, where he trained terrorists to be sent to India to carry out Pulwama-like attacks.
Azhar, who was in the custody of Indian forces, was not a hard nut to crack. A former police officer, who interrogated Azhar after his arrest in 1994, said he got shaken up on the first "slap" from an army jawan prompting him to blurt out details of his movements.
He was arrested in Anantnag in South Kashmir in February 1994 after he had entered into India on a Portuguese passport through Bangladesh. "It was a chance arrest. He along with Sajjad Afghani were travelling in an auto when it was stopped by armymen at Khanabal.
"Both ran from the autorickshaw prompting the army men to nab them. Army men were happy to find Sajjad Afghani and had a little knowledge about the other," former Director General of Sikkim Police Avinash Mohananey, who interrogated Azhar many a times during his two-decade tenure in the Intelligence Bureau said.
The 50-year-old Azhar, son of a retired school headmaster from Bhawalpur in Pakistan, always felt his custody in India was shortlived and attempts will be made for his release, he had said during his first meeting with Mohnaney at Kot Balwal jail in Jammu, immediately after his arrest.
The attempts were made indeed -- the first one within 10 months of his arrest when some foreigners were kidnapped from Delhi in February 1994 and demanded his release.
The plot failed with the arrest of Omar Sheikh, who would be eventually released in exchange of the passengers of the hijacked flight, and was later involved in the gruesome beheading of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl in Pakistan.
Another attempt to release him was made by a shadow group of Harkat-ul-Ansar, Al-Faran, which demanded his release in exchange of five foreigners kidnapped in Kashmir in July 1995.
A tunnel was dig in Kot Balwal jail in 1999 to ensure his escape but Azhar could not move out because of his unusual body structure. However, in the process, Sajjad Afghani was killed.
Finally, he was released by the BJP-led NDA government in 1999, along with Omar Sheikh and Mushtaq Ahmed Zargar alias 'Latram', in exchange of the passengers of the flight IC-814.
The Kathmandu-New Delhi plane was hijacked and taken to Kandahar in Afghanistan by Masood Azhar's men.