The Asian Age

Man on mission to radicalise Rohingyas held

- SAURABH TRIVEDI

A 27-year-old suspected Al Qaeda operative, who had come to India to train and radicalise Rohingyas to fight against the Myanmar Army, was arrested from east Delhi on Sunday evening.

He was sent to police custody till September end by a city court on Monday after the investigat­ors said he was required to be quizzed to unearth aspects relating to recruitmen­t of youths for terror activities in West Bengal, Jharkhand and Bihar.

Initially, the accused tried to mislead the police by claiming that his real name is Shumon Haq. He even showed them a fake voter ID card issued from Kishanganj, Bihar, but subsequent­ly, he was identified as Samiun Rahman, alias Raju Bhai, a British national of Bangladesh­i origin, they added.

The Delhi police’s special cell had been working to gain informatio­n about Rahman since July. The sleuths had learnt that one “Raju Bhai” of Al Qaeda is trying to set up base in Delhi to carry out terrorist activities here.

The police team deployed sources in the NCR and other states to get informatio­n on him. It was further learnt that Raju Bhai is in Delhi and is attempting to recruit people for the purpose of jihad, said Pramod Singh

In 2013, Shumon Haq was booked for rash driving in London. In the prison, inmates radicalise­d him.

Kushwah, deputy commission­er of police (special cell).

On Monday, the police learnt that Raju Bhai would come to Vikas Marg, Shakarpur (near ITO), to meet one of the probable Jihadi recruits, he said.

Raju Bhai was nabbed and it was later that the police learnt his real name. A pistol of 9mm calibre, laptop, mobile phones, $2,000, 13,000 in Bangladesh­i currency and Indian currency were recovered from him, Mr Kushwah added.

It was found that he is a trained militant and has visited Morocco, Islamic Republic of Mauritania, Turkey, Syria and Bangladesh, apart from India for terrorist activities, added the officer.

In 2013, he was booked for rash driving in London and sent to six months imprisonme­nt. In the prison, inmates radicalise­d him, said a police official. He got influenced by the ideology of Al Qaeda and joined it. He obtained three-week training in their camp in Syria and fought there till 2014. While he was in Syria, their group came to know about the ‘atrocities’ on Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar.

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