Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Some patients hid during checks at Markaz: Police

- Prawesh Lama prawesh.lama@htlive.com (With inputs from Sweta Goswami and Vatsala Shrangi)

NEW DELHI: Tablighi Jamaat head Maulana Saad, who has been booked for defying restrictio­ns on public gatherings, concealed crucial informatio­n on the number and the health condition of those inside the Islamic missionary group’s headquarte­rs in Delhi’s Nizamuddin, which has emerged as a hot spot driving up the tally of Covid-19 cases in India, according to multiple police and government officials.

On March 25, when a joint team of police and health officials went inside for the first time, people in the six-storey building hid in bathrooms, concealed symptoms of the contagious disease even as some took medicines to reduce their body temperatur­e, a senior police officer said on the condition of anonymity.

This officer also said the Jamaat management lied about the size of the gathering, putting the number of people present between 800 and 1,000. The joint team of police, health workers, and the World Health Organizati­on has evacuated 2,346 people, including at least 250 foreigners, from the building in a 36-hour operation till Wednesday morning. Saad and six other top functionar­ies of the group were booked on Tuesday after the Jamaat headquarte­rs emerged as the single-biggest source of Covid-19 infections in the country. By Wednesday evening, the headquarte­rs, also known as Markaz, was linked, directly and indirectly, to at least 283 infections and 10 deaths.

States have been instructed by the cabinet secretary to trace the thousands of attendees of the March event organised by the Jamaat. The Centre has separately begun the process of blacklisti­ng about 250 foreigners who attended the congregati­on, allegedly flouting visa rules by claiming to be tourists. Ideally, they should have applied for a religious missionary visa.

Amid reports of Saad going missing, another senior officer of the Delhi Police’s crime branch said: “I am not sure if you can say he is absconding. He [Saad] is not at the Markaz. He is also not at any hospital or quarantine facility. We have just started the probe...The police were busy clearing the site and getting it sanitised while also identifyin­g others who may have been infected by the Sars-Cov-2 virus [which causes Covid-19].”

Fuzail Ayyubi, the legal counsel of Jamaat, said Saad was in Delhi, and denied allegation­s of concealing informatio­n. “... [He] will join the investigat­ion when police summon him. We got to know about the FIR from the media reports. The allegation of concealing informatio­n is wrong because between March 25 and 28, the police and health teams came inside and took several pilgrims.”

A third police officer, who too spoke on the condition of anonymity, said until the night of March 28, Jamaat members tried to hide from health workers who were allowed inside the building.

Officials also said they were seeking to interrogat­e Saad over an audio recording (mentioned in the FIR filed on Tuesday) in which he is purportedl­y heard asking his followers to flout social distancing guidelines. Jamaat counsel Ayyubi, however, said the allegation about the audio tape was “completely misplaced”.

The Tablighi Jamaat issued a statement on Tuesday, saying the visitors were stuck at the headquarte­rs because of the lockdown. Its spokesman, Mohammed Shoaib, said the group sent a request for curfew passes to the Delhi government to help the visitors leave the Jamaat headquarte­rs but received no reply.

“Their request for passes was kept in abeyance because there was confusion on whether issuance of passes to them would have violated the lockdown norms as their request did not come under essential services [which were allowed to function]. We are still looking at lapses, if any, on the part of government officials,” a Delhi government official said.

 ?? BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT ?? Paramilita­ry forces keep a watch in Nizamuddin.
BIPLOV BHUYAN/HT Paramilita­ry forces keep a watch in Nizamuddin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India