The daring attack inside the premises of Srinagar's main hospital ended with the terrorists escaping into the narrow lanes and bylanes of downtown Srinagar, a police official said.
Mohammed Naveed Jhutt, the 22-year-old LeT militant from Pakistan who was caught in Kulgam in south Kashmir in 2014, managed to escape with the assailants, police said.
The ultras opened fire on the police party accompanying Jhutt, alias Abu Hanzala, outside the busy hospital in Kaka Sarai area, police said.
His colleague, Constable Babar Ahmad, was critically injured and admitted to the hospital. However, he succumbed to his injuries a few hours later.
"It's a very unfortunate incident and the terrorists managed to free one of their hardcore accomplices. We have sounded a red alert to nab all those involved in this crime," said Director General of Police S P Vaid.
The police team was taking six prisoners, including Jhutt, to the hospital for treatment, added Deputy Inspector General (Central Kashmir) Ghulam Hasan Bhat, who visited the scene of the attack.
The pheran-clad militants were lying in wait in the parking lot of the hospital.
Two Lashkar militants rained bullets at the police party and fled towards downtown Srinagar.
The hospital, named after Shri Maharaja Hari Singh, the last ruler of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, is strategically located on the banks of a tributary of the river Jehlum, with uptown Karan Nagar on one side and Nawab Bazaar in downtown Srinagar on the other.
He was arrested on August 26, 2014.
The militant had undergone intensive training and was good in handling equipment like compasses, GPS, wireless sets and mobile phones installed with Skype software, an official said.
Jammu and Kashmir police wanted to shift him along with five other prisoners from Srinagar jail to other high security jails outside the Valley but was disallowed from doing so by the sessions court on December 26, 2017.
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