A massive manhunt is on in the jungles of Churachandrapur in Manipur near the border with Myanmar to search for terrorists belonging to two shadowy outfits who have claimed responsibility for a deadly ambush which killed personnel and family members of the para-military Assam Rifles.
Officials said that the combing operation conducted jointly by Assam Rifles and state police was on in the jungles surrounding the village of Sekhen where the ambush was laid on Saturday.
Manipur Chief Minister N Biren Singh on Sunday said that security along the Myanmar border through which terrorists are believed to have slipped in and ambushed an Assam Rifles Colonel, his wife, son and four other riflemen, was being tightened.
The chief minister who laid wreaths on their bodies at Imphal airport, also said the home department and para-military forces had been instructed to bring the terrorists to justice at the earliest.
Two terrorist groups - People's Liberation Army and the Manipur Naga People's Front -had on Saturday jointly claimed responsibility for the attack.
Officials said the two groups one of which had been dormant for several years, while the other is little known of, had chosen their target carefully and were likely trying to make their way back to base camps in Myanmar.
Speaking to media-persons after the wreath laying ceremony, Mr Singh said "the government will not tolerate such terrorist activities in the state" and added that security along the border areas of the state would be increased.
Strongly condemning the "horrifying ambush" on the Assam Rifles convoy, he said he has instructed the Home Department and para military forces to "arrest and punish the perpetrators" according to the rule of law.
The bodies of Col Viplav Tripathi, his family and Assam rifles personnel, who lost their lives in the terror attack in Manipur on Saturday have been flown out to their respective home towns.
Col Tripathi, the Commanding Officer of Khuga Battalion of Assam Rifles, his wife Anuja and son Abeer, besides four personnel of the country's oldest paramilitary force were killed on Saturday in a welter of IED blasts and gunfire in Manipur's Churachandpur district.
The four Assam Rifles personnel killed in the attack were Rifleman (Rfn) Shyamal Das, Rfn Suman Swargiary, Rfn RP Meena and Rfn Khatnei Konyak.
Col Tripathi was a resident of Raigarh in Chattisgarh. Rfn Das was a resident of Murshidabad in West Bengal and Rfn Swargiary belonged to Baksa district in Assam. Rfn Konyak was from Mon district in Nagaland, while Rfn Meena was a resident of Dausa district in Rajasthan.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Curfew Relaxed In 4 Districts, Internet Suspension Lifted In Manipur Manipur Minister Builds Bunker, Puts Barbed Wire Around Home Amid Unrest "There's A Photo...": Manipur Chief Minister vs P Chidambaram On Militancy AR Rahman's Wife Saira Announces Separation After 29 Years Of Marriage Air India Flight From Paris Diverted To Jaipur, Fliers Sent To Delhi On Bus Explained: Why Delhi's AQI Was 494 Today But International Monitor Said 1,600 Amid Russia-Ukraine Conflict, Why These Countries Are Preparing For War Italian Village Offers $1 Homes To Disappointed US Voters Post-Election Trump's Policies To Benefit India's IT Sector, Wipro Chairman Explains How Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.