Hindustan Times (Delhi)

NIA arrests Hizbul chief’s son in ‘terror-funding’ case

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

New Delhi/srinagar:

The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) on Thursday arrested the son of Syed Salahuddin, the chief of the terror outfit Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) and designated as a global terrorist by the United States, on charges that he had received money from HM operatives based in Saudi Arabia between 2008 and 2011.

Salahuddin’s son, 48-year-old Syed Ahmad Shakeel, works as lab assistant in the Sher-i-kashmir Institute of Medical Sciences (SKIMS) in Srinagar. He has been brought to Delhi for further questionin­g, said a senior official of the federal anti-terror agency who asked not to be named.

In October last year, NIA had arrested Salahuddin’s elder son Syed Shahid Yusuf, working in the agricultur­e department of the state, in relation with the same case. “The case pertains to the transfer of funds through hawala channels by terrorists based in Pakistan to Jammu and Kashmir in a criminal conspiracy hatched with some operatives in India. This was to fuel and fund secessioni­st and terrorist activities in state,” said a statement by the agency.

During investigat­ion, NIA said it discovered that both the sons of Salauddin, who also heads the United Jehad Council — an amalgam of several militant organisati­on based in the Pakistan-occupided-kashmir (POK) — received money from HM operatives Mohammed Maqbool Pandit and Aijaz Ahmed Bhat, who are suspected to be in Saudi Arabia.

“The same Saudi Arabia-based HM operatives were sending money to others in J&K for fuelling violence. He (Shakeel) had been summoned for questionin­g earlier but he didn’t appear before the investigat­ion officer. A non-bailable warrant is pending against him,” said the NIA official cited above.

“So far in this case, three accused persons — Mohd. Sidiq Ganai, Ghulam Jeelani Liloo and Farooq Ahmed Dagga — have been convicted after they pleaded guilty,” read the statement.

The family members of Shahid and Shakeel have blamed the Centre for trying to “frame” the SRINAGAR: The Jammu and Kashmir police have questioned families of three Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) militants in south Kashmir’s Pulwama district.

Police said Riyaz Naikoo, Lateef Dar and Adil Ahmad’s families were questioned on Wednesday evening for “updating records” and for urging them to persuade the militants to surrender.

“We need to update our records from time to time and to incorporat­e new inputs,” said police superinten­dent Mohammad Zaid. “It is our duty to ask them for their surrender.”

Naikoo, 30, is one of the longest-surviving HM mili-

brothers to put pressure on Salahuddin.

In an interview to India TV in July, former J&K chief minister Mehbooba Mufti had said Salahudin’s elder son was arrested because his father was top militant commander.

But NIA officials insist that both the brothers have received “tainted money” through elec- tants. He joined the group around the same time as Burhan Wani, who was killed in 2016.

Naikoo had on Tuesday warned the people of acid attacks if they participat­ed in the local bodies polls to be held from September to December.

Separately, a policeman’s son, Asif Ahmad Rather, was allegedly abducted from his home from Pinglish village in south Kashmir’s Tral on Wednesday. “Three gunmen came to his home and took him along. They told him to come and he went. We are investigat­ing the case,” Zaid said. He added that Rather is an MSC Sericultur­e student. Rather’s family and classmates have appealed for his release.

tronic transfers. “They need to explain why they were getting regular payments from tainted sources,” said the NIA official.

Salahuddin has been based in POK since the late 1980s when he founded the Hizbul Mujahideen, Jammu and Kashmir’s biggest indigenous militant group, after unsuccessf­ully contesting the 1987 assembly elections.

 ?? WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO ?? Paramilita­ry soldiers stand guard near a closed market as separatist­s announce a twoday lockdown in the Valley over Article 35A, in Srinagar on Thursday.
WASEEM ANDRABI/ HT PHOTO Paramilita­ry soldiers stand guard near a closed market as separatist­s announce a twoday lockdown in the Valley over Article 35A, in Srinagar on Thursday.

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