Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Fourth Mumbai youth who fled home to join IS killed, claims kin

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com With inputs from Ramesh Babu

MUMBAI: Fahad Shaikh, a 24-yearold Kalyan resident who fled from home with three of his friends to join the Islamic State in 2014, has been reported killed.

Fahad’s father Tanveer Shaikh told HT on Wednesday that a phone call from an unknown number alerted him to his death on Tuesday afternoon.

“Your son is no more,” the caller told him in English, before switching to Hindi. He then went on to say that Fahad had been killed in Syria, and the last rites would be performed soon. “Unable to take it anymore, I handed the phone to my wife,” said Tanveer. The person, who did not reveal his identity, was using a masked Voice over Internet Protocol number to make the call.

The informatio­n has been shared with the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) and the Maharashtr­a Anti-Terrorism Squad, which have been keeping track of the youngsters ever since they went missing in 2014. “We also shared our telephone number with the NIA, so they can inform us after obtaining confirmati­on from Indian officials in Syria or Iraq,” the victim’s father said, adding that Fahad’s last rites (Namaaz-e-Zanaaja) will be conducted only after that. Thane police commission­er Param Bir Singh told HT that Tanveer’s statement was recorded at the Bazaarpeth police station, where a missing complaint was lodged after Fahad’s disappeara­nce. “We have already intimated the NIA and the ATS in this regard,” he said.

In November 2014, the parents of Aman Nadeem Tandel received a similar call from an unknown number informing them about his death.

THREE HELD IN KERALA

Police arrested three men in Kerala for their suspected links with the IS terrorist group, after an intelligen­ce report said the trio returned home when they failed to enter Syria through Turkey. The cops anticipate more people from the coastal state to return as the Islamic State’s so-called caliphate is crumbling under sustained military assaults and the group’s base in Syria and Iraq has shrunk. Their identity and details such as when they went to join the IS weren’t revealed.

Kannur police deputy superinten­dent PP Sadanandan said, “They said they were detained by Turkish police … and sent back tothe countries fromwhere they went,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Kurdish Peshmerga fighters in Mosul.
REUTERS Kurdish Peshmerga fighters in Mosul.

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