The Free Press Journal

Underworld influence drops by 80% since the last 25 years

- DIWAKAR SHARMA

The strict vigil of Maharashtr­a police and the fast adoption of technologi­es in its cyber cell has broken the ribs of underworld gangsters in the last 25 years. The former DGP of Maharashtr­a Arvind Inamdar believes the influence of underworld has been reduced by 80 percent but underlined that police need to continuous­ly monitor movements of underworld as ‘it may revive’ to create terror like 1993 bomb blasts.

He further said the crime pattern has changed in the last 25 years.

“The Maharashtr­a police, who became very sensitive after 1993 serial blasts, have taken very stern action against the underworld. The strict vigil of Maharashtr­a police as well as Central agencies has broken the ribs of organised crime. Besides this, law of MCOCA was enacted in 1999 to overpower the influence of underworld. So, by now 70-80 percent of gangsters are either inside jail or they have become very old or they have passed away. In my days, almost everyday there was shoot-out but now we hardly read about such incident. But the police have to keep their hawk-eye on them because anytime they can raise their heads to create terror like 1993 blasts that rocked the country,” Inamdar told the Free Press Journal.

Last week the CBI arrested Dawood Ibrahim’s close aide Farooq Takla who provided logistics support to 1993 blasts co-accused in Dubai from where they travelled to other places for getting arms and ammunition and sending them from Dubai to Pakistan for training in handling explosives.

“The law must be supreme to ensure proper law and order; and justice must be done in a very short time. It should not take so many years. The severity of the punishment matters but certainty of punishment matters the most. All the co-accused (in 1993 blasts) must know that one day they will be caught like Takla. The gangsters,

by now, have learnt that it is not easy to come out of the hands of Indian law. But simultaneo­usly, we need to strengthen the judiciary and the entire process,” added Inamdar. Now the bigger challenge before police is to control the white collar crimes and economic offences, said Inamadar and added, “We need to break the nexus of business tycoons, bureaucrat­s and politician­s to stop people like Nirav Modi to loot India. People like Nirav Modi is more dangerous than Dawood.” Speaking on the same line the

encounter specialist Pradeep Sharma said Dawood and his henchmen have been providing logistics support to terrorists to create terror in Mumbai. “Earlier the police was dependent on informants but now we are using advanced technologi­es to keep track of them. Our cyber cell is continuous­ly upgrading across Maharashtr­a,” said Sharma, who is a senior police inspector from the Thane Anti Extortion Cell.

The underworld used to make huge money from the film industry by extorting film

producers/directors. “The underworld was into extortion racket in Mumbai and adjoining areas. Earlier it was easy for them to extort money from film industry but their extortion business has been wiped out after corporate firms started investing in the industry,” said Sharma, who arrested Dawood’s brother Iqbal Kaskar from the home of his deceased sister, Haseena Parker in Mumbai’s Nagpada last year. The remaining 20 percent of gangsters like Suresh Pujari, Ravi Pujari are creating fear among people.

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