New Delhi: For the second time in less than ten days, Foreign Secretary of India S. Jaishankar on Tuesday issued a demarche to Pakistan High Commissioner Abdul Basit over Uri attack and confronted him with proof of “cross-border origins” of the terror strike in which 18 troops were killed.

The Foreign Secretary called in Basit and told him that the preliminary interrogation reveals that one of the slain Uri attackers was Hafiz Ahmed, son of Feroz and resident of Dharbang, Muzaffarabad in Pakistan. he also gave details of the Pakistan-based handlers of the attackers, ministry spokesperson Vikas Swarup said.

“Local villagers in the Uri sector apprehended two individuals from Pakistan-occupied Kashmir who have acted as guides for terrorists and helped them infiltrate across the LOC on September 21 and handed over to Indian security forces,” Swarup said.

They have been identified as Faizal Hussain Awan, 20, son of Gul Akbar, resident of Potha Jahangir, Muzaffarabad; and Yasin Khursheed, 19, son of Mohammed Khurshid, resident of Khiliana Kalan, Muzaffarabad, Basit was told.

During his interrogation, Awan has deposed to the NIA that they had “guided and facilitated” the border crossing of the group that perpetrated the September 18 Uri massacre, the Foreign Secretary told him.

In another incident on September 23, one Pakistani national, Abdul Qayoom, resident of Sialkot, was arrested from the Molu sector on the Indian side just across Pakistan’s Sialkot. He has confessed to undergoing three weeks of training with the Lashkar-e-Toiba terrorist group and donating substantial funds to Falah-e-Insaniat Foundation, their front organisation, Basit was conveyed.

“We are willing to provide the Pakistan High Commission consular access to these three individuals apprehended in connection with terrorist attacks in India,” the Foreign Secretary told the Pakistani envoy.

Basit was also told that these arrests and subsequent interrogation underline the cross-border infiltration that had been the subject of their previous discussion.

“We would once again strongly urge the Government of Pakistan to take seriously its commitment not to allow terrorist attacks against India from its soil and territory under its control. Continuing cross-border terrorist attacks from Pakistan against India are unacceptable,” Jaishankar asserted.

This is the second time since the attack on September 18 that the Pakistani envoy has been summoned over the terror strike which India maintains was carried out by Pakistan-based terror groups.

New Delhi has already offered to provide Pakistan with fingerprints and DNA samples of terrorists killed in Uri and Poonch, if that country wished to investigate these cross-border attacks.

During the earlier summoning on September 21, Jaishankar had also shown Basit the content of the GPS recovered from the bodies of terrorists with coordinates that indicate the point and time of infiltration across the LoC and the subsequent route to the terror attack site and grenades with Pakistani markings as evidence of Pakistan’s role.

“Following the terrorist attack on the Uri garrison of the Indian Army on 18 September 2016, India had taken up with Pakistan the issue of honouring its January 2004 commitment not to allow its soil or territory under its control to be used for terrorism against India,” Swarup added.

Tuesday’s summoning comes amid India weighing the options to hit back at Pakistan in the aftermath of the Uri attack.

After a review of Indus Water Treaty (IWT), the government is also planning to review the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status granted by it, unilaterally, to Pakistan.

During the review of IWT, the government decided to take a number of steps including to “exploit to the maximum” the water of Pakistan-controlled rivers, including the Jhelum, as per the water sharing pact and suspension of IWT Commission meeting till the atmosphere was “free of terror”.