Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NIA to probe Kerala ‘love jihad’ marriage

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com

SC ORDER Retired apex court judge to monitor the probe; refuses to interview the woman till the investigat­ion ends

The Supreme Court on Wednesday directed the NIA to conduct a probe into the alleged “love jihad” marriage in Kerala after the central agency said it was not an isolated case but had similariti­es with another where allegation­s about a well-oiled mechanism to convert women from Hinduism to Islam were made.

A bench headed by Chief Justice JS Khehar said retired SC judge justice RV Raveendran will monitor the probe to ensure the inquiry is fair.

The bench’s order came on a petition filed by Kerala-based Shafin Jahan, a Muslim man whose marriage with a Hindu woman was annulled by the Kerala high court describing it as a case of “love jihad”. Love jihad is a term certain Hindu groups use to allege an Islamist strategy of converting Hindu women through seduction, marriage, money or threat.

While annulling their marriage a division bench of the high court also made serious observatio­ns that a high-level probe was needed to find out whether there was an organised syndicate behind “love jihad” and their suspected role in recruiting youth for the ISIS. Jahan wants the HC order to be set aside.

The top court refused to consider Jahan’s lawyer Kapil Sibal’s request to interview the woman. The senior advocate said the woman was a doctor and a major who could not be kept under lock and key. “Have you heard about the Blue Whale challenge? Such things can drive people to do anything. We want inputs from all sides before we take a final decision,” Chief Justice Khehar told Sibal.

The bench also assured him that it would speak with the woman before passing any final orders.

Additional solicitor general Maninder Singh told the court that the case was not an isolated case and the bench agreed with him, saying the HC order also mentioned it. “We have arrived at some observatio­ns based on court’s order,” Singh said.

Singh gave reference to another case and said the organisati­on that took the woman’s custody in the present case was also involved in the earlier one.

“In both, the organisati­on was involved in getting the women married. The organisati­on perhaps has some links with SIMI (banned Students Islamic Movement of India),” Singh said.

“The entities also appear to be common. The pattern appears that girls leave homes due to difference­s of opinion with family and somebody volunteers to give them shelter and this requires investigat­ion,” he informed the bench, which also wondered how a homoeopath doctor gave three different names.

The top court on August 11 ordered Kerala police to hand over the case papers to the National Investigat­ing Agency, which was asked to give its inputs in the case.

CONTINUED ON P 5

The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) on Wednesday conducted fresh searches at 12 locations in Jammu and Kashmir as part of its probe into whether the funding of separatist­s from Pakistani terrorist outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) was being used to fuel violence in the valley.

The searches, which the central agency termed as follow-up action, were carried out in Srinagar, Baramulla, and Handwara.

Those raided on Wednesday included a Srinagar-based advocate Mohammed Shafi Reshi and three relatives of prominent businessma­n Zahoor Watali, whose premises were searched in the first round of raids.

The agency has so far arrested seven people — Hurriyat chief Syed Ali Shah Geelani’s son-inlaw Altaf Ahmed Shah, Ayaz Akbar Khanday, Mehrajuddi­n Kalwal, Peer Saifullah (all from Geelani’s faction of Hurriyat), Shahid-ul-Islam (of faction led by Mirwaiz Umar Farooq), Nayeem Khan of the Jammu Kashmir National Front and Farooq Ahmed Dar alias Bitta Karatay of the Jammu and Kashmir Liberation Front (R). The agency now plans to summon Geelani, Malik, Shabir Shah, and Farooq.

CONTINUED ON P 5

Have you heard about the Blue Whale challenge? Such things can drive people to do anything. We want inputs from all sides before we take a final decision

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India