While number of militants killed in the counter-insurgency operations rose by 10 per cent to 110, number of security personnel killed dropped from 61 last year to 51 this year.
The year began on a violent note when Assistant Sub-Inspector of Police Kafeel Ahmad was killed and three policemen were injured in an encounter on January 7 between security forces and militants in Sopore township of north Kashmir's Baramulla district.
Six days later, on January 13, a 'divisional commander' of Jaish-e-Mujhahideen was among three foreign militants killed in an encounter in Dooru village in the foothills of Cherhar forests in Sopore.
By the end of the first month, seven militants were killed in encounters at different places in the state.
The number went slightly up in the next month, when 11 militants, including seven LeT militants in Lolab forests of Kupwara district. While no security personnel were killed in militancy-related violence, February saw the killing of a youth in Sopore town.
The army described the strategy as the fall-out of the robust counter-infiltration grid on the Line of Control (LoC).
"The robust counter-infiltration grid that is in place at the LoC has made it almost impermeable for the terrorists to carry weaponry. That is why they were resorting to hit and run attacks on the security forces and then decamped with their weapons," Corps Commander of the Srinagar-based Chinar Corps, Lt Gen Subrata Saha said.
