Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Man wanted for Red Fort terror attack nabbed

- Karn Pratap Singh karn.singh@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A 37-year-old suspected Lashkar-e-taiba (LET) militant, allegedly involved in the 2000 Red Fort terror attack, was arrested on Wednesday evening from Delhi airport by a joint team of the Delhi Police special cell and anti-terrorist squad (ATS) of Gujarat Police. Police claim the accused, Bilal Ahmed Kawa, was the same person they had been looking for since the day of the attack on December 22, 2000.

MM Oberoi, joint commission­er of police (special cell) confirmed Bilal Ahmed arrest. “He had come to Delhi from Srinagar by flight. We are interrogat­ing him to verify his antecedent­s and probe the purpose of his Delhi visit,” said Oberoi.

Bilal is being interrogat­ed at the Lodhi Colony special cell. Special cell officials said Bilal Ahmed was in the business of manufactur­ing leather jackets in Kashmir. He has told interrogat­ors that he had been visiting Delhi every year since.

“Why he could not be arrested in the last 17 years is a matter of investigat­ion. Though he has been denying his role in the Red Fort attack, we have enough evi- dence against him to prove that he was a key accused in the shoot out,” said a special cell officer associated with the probe.

Six LET terrorists had stormed Red Fort on December 22, 2000, and opened fire, killing three security personnel. The army personnel present in the fort had retaliated but the terrorists managed to escape.

According to police, during investigat­ions they learnt that ₹29.5 lakh was transferre­d through hawala and various bank accounts in Bilal Ahmed’s name. This amount was deposited in Bilal Ahmed’s account by Mohammad Arif alias Ashfaq Ahmed, the mastermind of the attack. Ashfaq Ahmed had received the money through hawala from his handlers apparently based in Pakistan, said police.

The Delhi Police filed a chargeshee­t against the prime accused Ashfaq Ahmed and 21 others in February 2001. However, the court framed charges against 11 people, including Ahmed.

Pramod Kushwah, deputy commission­er of police (special cell), said, “We arrested the suspect after it was confirmed that he was the same man we had been looking for in the Red Fort attack.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India