July 05, 2013 12:58 IST

As the debate rages on whether Ishrat Jahan and her accomplices were operatives of the Lashkar-e-Tayiba or not, there is increasing proof to show that she indeed had links with the outfit. Although the extent of her links is still unknown, she was considered to be a suicide bomber in the investigating and intelligence circles.

The alert by the Intelligence Bureau, which is under question, relies on the three mentioned proofs to suggest that she had links with the Lashkar.

While arrested American LeT operative David Headley’s testimony is one, there is also a report published by a magazine owned by the Lashkar which claimed that Ishrat was a Lashkar martyr. However, the most crucial document is the affidavit submitted by Union home ministry before the Gujarat high court four years back in which it said that she had links with the terror outfit.

The 2009 affidavit states that Ishrat and her accomplice Javed were actively involved with the Lashkar. The affidavit further states that Javed was in touch with the Lashkar cadres and they were planning a major operation in Gujarat.

“He converted to Islam but secured a passport in his Hindu name and travelled to Dubai and it is believed that he was aiding Lashkar activities over there,” the affidavit also points out.

Javed met with Ishrat at Mumbra in Maharashtra’s Thane district and here it is believed that he coaxed her into joining the outfit.

Investigators point out that Ishrat had no criminal background and even the Maharashtra police had said so. Javed had picked and chosen a person with a clean slate and brainwashed her so that there would be no heat, investigators also point out.

While this is one part of the Intelligence Bureau’s argument, the other is regarding the David Headley testimony before the American Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Investigation Agency of India. The testimony of Headley coincides with an alert that was put up by the intelligence agencies in 2001.

It was stated at that time the Lashkar was looking to recruit female suicide bombers. This was once again reiterated by the intelligence in 2003 and later in 2009. The Lashkar, according to inputs by both the Indian and US agencies, was looking to start a women’s wing and were recruiting female fidayeens. It was thought that women are lesser under scrutiny and moreover they had picked up the strategy from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam which was also known to recruit women bombers.

The intelligence says that Ishrat could have been part of this same programme, and for an operation of a very large magnitude such as Gujarat they wanted a woman taking part so that the radar would be low on her.