Mansi, a four-year-old labrador and a member of Army’s tracker dog unit, has become possibly the first canine to have been selected for a posthumous war honour, after she and her handler Bashir Ahmed War laid down their lives to prevent an infiltration bid by terrorists in north Kashmir
New Delhi: Mansi, a four-year-old labrador and a member of Army’s tracker dog unit, has become possibly the first canine to have been selected for a posthumous war honour, after she and her handler Bashir Ahmed War laid down their lives to prevent an infiltration bid by terrorists in north Kashmir.
Mansi was yesterday honoured with the Mention of Despatches certificate. Her name will appear in the Gazette of India for making supreme sacrifice for the nation. War, her handler and a resident of Kupwara, was also posthumously awarded the Sena Medal as he died while challenging a group of infiltrating militants in Tangdhar, 150 kms from Srinagar. The duo had had a successful season last year with three kills to their credit. They were involved in the killing of a terrorist at Kaisuri ridge in Tangdhar area, followed by the gunning down of two militants in July.
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Mansi and War, of the 160 Territorial Army, were gunned down by infiltrating terrorists in August last year when they were posted in the dense forests where terrorist from Pak- occupied-Kashmir made an infiltration bid in Tangdhar sector.