🚨 Terror Alert in Bihar: 3 Pak-Based JeM Militants Sneak In via Nepal?
- MediaFx
- Aug 28
- 2 min read
TL;DR: Bihar is on high alert after intelligence agencies reported that three Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) terrorists entered the state through the Nepal border. Police have shared their photos, names, and passport details across districts and even announced a ₹50,000 reward for any information. The timing is serious — just weeks before assembly polls. Railway stations, bus stands, hotels, and highways are all under watch. But in the middle of all this, it’s the ordinary working people who are forced to face the highest burden of security checks and suspicion.

Bihar on High Alert
Bihar Police has issued a statewide alert after intelligence inputs suggested that three Pakistan-based JeM operatives—Hasnain Ali (Rawalpindi), Adil Hussain (Umarkot), and Mohammad Usman (Bahawalpur)—entered India through Nepal.
Reports say the trio landed in Kathmandu earlier this month, stayed underground for a few days, and crossed into Bihar around Independence Day, 15th August. This makes security agencies suspect a bigger plot.
Hunt Across the State
A ₹50,000 reward has been declared for information leading to their capture.
Their passport details and photographs have been circulated to all police stations.
Security has been tightened at hotels, bus stands, railway stations, and dharamshalas.
Border districts like Sitamarhi, Madhubani, and Darbhanga are on strict watch.
The police have also appealed to the public to report any suspicious movements.
Election Factor
The alert comes at a sensitive time, with assembly elections in Bihar just around the corner. Political leaders are expected to visit the state in large numbers, which automatically raises security concerns. This timing makes the alert even more critical.
Nepal as the Entry Point
India and Nepal share an open border, which allows citizens to travel freely without visas or strict checks. While this helps trade and daily movement, it also leaves scope for misuse by terror networks. Security experts had already warned that the Nepal route could be exploited by outfits like JeM and Lashkar-e-Taiba. Today’s situation proves those warnings were not empty.
The People’s Angle
While politicians and officials will debate “national security” in front of cameras, the real pressure falls on the poor and working class. Street vendors at bus stands, daily wage labourers near railway stations, and migrant workers crossing borders for jobs face constant harassment during security crackdowns.
Meanwhile, the rich and powerful remain safe behind police convoys and VIP security. The unequal impact of such alerts shows how ordinary citizens are forced to bear the brunt of state security failures.
MediaFx People’s Take
Security is important, no doubt. But true safety doesn’t come only from guns and raids. It comes when:
Youth have jobs, so they don’t fall into criminal or extremist networks.
Border infrastructure is improved in a way that doesn’t harass ordinary people.
India and Nepal work together on intelligence sharing to stop threats at the source.
At the end of the day, working people deserve dignity and peace, not fear and suspicion.
What’s Your Take?
Do you think such alerts really make us safer? Or do they just end up troubling ordinary people while politicians use fear during elections? Tell us your view in the comments.