Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Nizam Museum heist cracked, 2 arrested

- Srinivasa Rao Apparasu letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Hyderabad police on Tuesday cracked the sensationa­l case of theft of precious artefacts belonging to Mir Osman Ali Khan, the last Nizam of the erstwhile Hyderabad state from the Nizam Museum at Purani Haveli in the old city in the early hours of September 3.

“We have arrested two persons who had resorted to theft and recovered the entire stolen property this morning,” Hyderabad police commission­er Anjani Kumar told HT.

The arrested were identified as Mohd Ghouse Pasha alias Khooni Ghouse (25), a constructi­on labourer, and Mohammad Mubeen (24), welder, both relatives from Rajendrana­gar area.

The precious items include a gold tiffin box studded with diamonds, a cup and saucer, and a spoon studded with rubies, diamonds and emeralds. The two robbers were tracked in Mumbai, where they were staying in a luxury hotel.

Interrogat­ion of the accused revealed that one of them used the golden tiffin box weighing more than two kg for having food every day. “Interestin­gly, they have not made any attempt to sell the stolen goods, which would have fetched more than ₹50 crore in the internatio­nal market for their antique value,” sources in the Hyderabad police said.

The commission­er said as many as 15 special teams had been formed to probe the theft from all angles and track the whereabout­s of the culprits.

The Nizam Museum, establishe­d in the year 2000, comprises more than 450 artefacts which were gifted to the seventh Nizam during the coronation of his silver jubilee in 1937. It also houses some other valuable objects belonging to his father Mir Mahboob Ali Khan, the sixth Nizam.

The museum is also home to Nizam’s cars including 1930 Rolls Royce, a 150-year-old manually operated lift and wardrobe of seventh Nizam, who was the richest man in the world in 1930s.

The police said burglars broke open the wooden ventilator of the museum and got into the hall using a rope. The closed circuit television camera (CCTV) near the ventilator, which was meant for keeping a surveillan­ce on the museum shelves, appeared to be deliberate­ly twisted to ensure that nothing was recorded.

However, the police recovered the footage from the CCTV cameras outside the museum, which showed two masked persons coming out of the adjacent building and riding a bike. The cops tried to track them down with the help of the mobile phone data collected from the nearby towers, as the pillion rider on the bike was found speaking on his mobile with someone.

A couple of days later, the police found an abandoned bike at Zaheerabad on HyderabadM­umbai highway. Subsequent enquiries in Mumbai led to the whereabout­s of the two accused who were staying at a star hotel in Mumbai.

HYDERABAD:

 ?? PTI ?? Police commission­er Anjani Kumar shows to media the threetier golden tiffin box and the gold cup and plate after their recovery, in Hyderabad on Tuesday.
PTI Police commission­er Anjani Kumar shows to media the threetier golden tiffin box and the gold cup and plate after their recovery, in Hyderabad on Tuesday.

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