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It was a six-hour denouement that ended in a hail of bullets – and a young man, barely out of his teens, dead inside a house surrounded by security personnel while his parents who had tried to talk him into surrendering waited nearby for news of the inevitable.
Rauf Khanday, believed to be a Hizbul Mujahideen militant, was killed in the pre-dawn darkness of Sunday at Dialgam village in south Kashmir's Anantnag district. But he was not just another statistic, said officials present at the spot as the hours dragged on and he showed no signs of surrendering.
Khanday, who had just passed his first year of graduation, was one of the two men holed up in a house in the village.
The beginning of his end started around 11 pm on Saturday when the police wireless buzzed. It was an intercept about the presence of two militants inside a house. After ascertaining the identity of the militants, the house was cordoned off by security personnel and they were asked to surrender, said an official.
One of the militants, whose identity has not been disclosed, did so immediately leaving young Khanday inside, cut off from the rest of the world.
Piecing together Khanday's last hours, officials recounted that a phone was passed on to Khanday so a conversation could begin.
Then followed the hours of trying to talk to him, reason with him and even bringing in his parents so they could convince him to surrender.
"It is always a tough call. I was pretty sure that the parents will be able to convince Khanday and he will come out and surrender. But destiny willed it otherwise," said Senior Superintendent of Police, Anantnag, Altaf Ahmed Khan.
Asked what had transpired, Khan, who has earlier headed districts like Shopian and Sopore, said he spoke to Khanday to understand his mental frame of mind and found he had interpreted various religious books wrongly.
Listening to the entire conversation were the commanders outside, their eyes fixed on the house where Khanday was hiding, said an official.
Around 1 am on Sunday, Khanday said he wanted to speak to his mother for which permission was granted.
"I sent a police team to his native place seven kilometres away. Security personnel escorted his father Bashid Ahmed Khandey and mother to the site so that they could persuade him to come out and surrender," said Khan.
"We were so desperate to save his life that we all agreed to his mother's request to take him home if he surrenders," he added.
Both parents went inside to speak to their son, raising hopes that there might not be any bloodshed.
They came out after half-an-hour, despair writ large on their face.
"I missed a heartbeat. A chill ran down my spine as we had to perform our final job now and fight him out," Khan said.
A commander present at the encounter site apologised to the parents, who knew the fate awaiting their son.
It was past 3 am now and Khan made yet another bid to engage with Khanday. He asked a small team to see if there could be a back door entry into the house so security personnel could overpower him.
Khan said Khanday fired at him when told that he was entering the house unarmed and would only engage in talks with him. Following this, security personnel began the final onslaught, killing Khanday.
Director General of Police S P Vaid made a special mention about Khan's efforts to save Khanday during a press conference on the three counter-insurgency operations in the valley that left 13 militants, three Army jawans and four civilians dead yesterday.
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