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Masood Azhar, founder of militant group that killed Indian troops in Kashmir, was freed from jail as part of hijackers’ demands
- Indian Airlines flight was hijacked on Christmas Eve in 1999
- Azhar was set free and founded Jaish-e-Mohammad shortly after
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For eight days in 1999 the world watched in horror as hijackers diverted an Indian Airlines flight to Afghanistan and held the passengers hostage, the drama ending only when Delhi agreed to release three Kashmiri militants.
Nearly 20 years later, India is still paying the price for that decision.
One of the militants freed was Masood Azhar, who went on to found Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), the militant group which claimed responsibility this month for the deadliest attack in three decades in Indian-held Kashmir.
More than 40 Indian paramilitaries were killed in the suicide blast on February 14, kindling a fresh diplomatic crisis between nuclear-armed arch-rivals India and Pakistan.
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JeM is based in Pakistan, one of several anti-Indian militant groups fighting in Kashmir which are officially banned in the country, but which are alleged to be used by Islamabad as proxies in India.

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Azhar, also, is believed to be in Pakistan – but his exact whereabouts remain shrouded in mystery.
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