Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NIA shares list of 125 JMB suspects in India

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Jamaat-ul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) was trying to spread its tentacles across India and a list of 125 suspects have been shared with different states, National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) chief YC Modi said on Monday.

Addressing a meeting of chiefs of the Anti Terrorism Squads (ATS), Modi said the JMB has spread its activities in states like Jharkhand, Bihar, Maharashtr­a, Karnataka and Kerala in the guise of Bangladesh­i immigrants.

“The NIA has shared with states concerned a list of 125 suspected activists who have close links with the JMB leadership,” he said.

Giving details of various o p e r a t i o nal t heat r e s , t he Inspector General of the NIA, Alok Mittal, said from 2014 to 2018, the JMB has set up 20-22 hideouts in Bengaluru and tried to spread its bases in South India.

“The JMB even conducted a trial of rocket launchers in the Krishnagir­i hills along the Karnataka border,” he said.

Mittal said the JMB was keen to attack Buddhist temples to take revenge for the plight of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar.

He said the JMB had started its activities first in 2007, init i a l l y i n West Bengal a nd Assam, and then in other parts of the country.

“During the investigat­ion, it was found that the 130 activists were in regular contact with the JMB leadership,” he said.

He said during the investigat­ion into the terror financing cases related to Jammu and Kashmir, it has come to the light that there were systemic weaknesses in the J&K Bank as it was not following the KYC rules, was giving unsecured loans and had no systemic data.

“The terrorists and their sympathise­rs have taken the advantage of the systemic weaknesses in the J&K Bank and was misusing the banking system,” he said.

Referring to the attempts to revive terrorism in Punjab, Mittal said the banned terror group Khalistan Liberation Front has been conspiring to disrupt the law and order and communal harmony in in the state with the active support from across the border and with funding from countries like UK, Australia and France.

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