Attackers wearing military uniforms shot dead 12 people and wounded 15 on Friday in a busy market area in a town in India's restive northeastern state of Assam, in an attack blamed by the authorities on a regional separatist group.
Three or four gunmen fired indiscriminately and threw hand grenades at the crowded market in Kokrajhar, a town about 220 km (137 miles) west of the state's commercial capital Guwahati, eyewitnesses said.
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One assailant was killed and security forces were in hot pursuit of three or four others in the area, Assam police chief Mukesh Sahay told TV channel CNN News 18.
A senior home ministry official in New Delhi said preliminary reports indicated the attack was carried out by separatist militants of the National Democratic Front of Bodoland (Songbijit).
"Police have launched a hunt to trace insurgents hiding near the incident spot. It is a militant attack and we will be sending a team from Delhi to investigate further," the official said.
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Assam, a remote and underdeveloped state in India's northeast, has suffered from years of ethnic and tribal insurgencies. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's nationalist party recently won power in a state election.
"This attack is intended to destabilise peace in Assam," said Himanta Biswa Sarma, the state's finance and health minister. There was no claim of responsibility for the attack.
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