The Sunday Guardian

Dilsukhnag­ar blast convicts will be moved from Hyderabad to Tihar

The five Indian Mujahideen terrorists have got death for the Dilsukhnag­ar blasts of 2013.

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President Pranab Mukherjee will be accorded an emotional farewell by his staff at Rashtrapat­hi Nilayam in Secunderab­ad when he hosts an “At Home” here on 30 December. The President is here to spend his annual two-week long southern sojourn since Thursday and will return to Rashtrapat­hi Bhawan in New Delhi on 31 December. The President’s term ends by July next year.

Though nowhere it is mentioned that this would be the last sojourn of the President in Hyderabad, the message is not lost on either side—the staff of the first citizen which coordinate­s his itinerary here or the staff of Rashtrapat­hi Nilayam which looks after his stay in Secunderab­ad. Even senior officials in Telangana government are treating this year’s tour of the President as something special.

“We came to know that the President had instructed his staff to allow who are interested in meeting him at Rashtrapat­hi Nilayam during his stay. This implies that the President is considerin­g this year’s southern sojourn as the last one,” said a senior official in the General Administra­tion Department (GAD) while talking to The Sunday Guardian.

The GAD takes care of the arrangemen­ts for the President’s stay at Rashtrapat­hi Nilayam, a sprawling bungalow built by the Nizams as Residency for British rulers in 1892. The architectu­ral splendour is built on an area of 90 acres that include a 16-acre herbal garden. Compared to his predecesso­rs, Mukherjee has not only spent more time but also made it a point to visit Rashtrapat­hi Nilayam every year in December. Five death convicts who are also Indian Mujahideen (IM) operatives—Yasin Bhatkal, Zia Ur Rahaman, Asadullah Akhtar, Tahseen Akhtar and Ajaz Shaik—will soon be taken to the high security Tihar prison in New Delhi. The National Investigat­ion Agency ( NIA), which arrested them and ensured their conviction, will move a transit petition before the special court to this extent and they will be in New Delhi after Christmas.

These hardened criminals will be kept in Tihar Central Jail for two reasons. One, they will be tried in four bomb blast cases across the country in the last eight years, which caused at least 30 deaths and left many injured. Second, the Cherlapall­i Central Prison, where they are lodged at present, is not a secure place to keep death row inmates, sources in the Telangana prisons department told this newspaper.

The NIA fought hard for their conviction. These terrorists claimed 18 lives and injured another 132 in twin bomb blasts at a crowded marketplac­e at Dilsukhnag­ar in Hyderabad on 21 February 2013. The NIA is also investigat­ing other bomb blasts in the country caused by the IM.

Presently the blast cases of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtr­a and Karnataka are in the final stages and the presence of these IM militants would ensure completion of the case, said a senior police official with a special investigat­ion team (SIT) in Telangana. This SIT originally took up the Dilsukhnag­ar blasts case which was later transferre­d to the NIA.

Additional public prosecutor K. Surender Rao who argued the NIA’s case in the Dilsukhnag­ar blast case told this newspaper that the agency might seek death penalties for them in other crimes, too.

However, the ruling of other trial courts in other cases won’t have any impact on their death penalties in the Hyderabad blasts case. The NIA sources are satisfied with the awarding of death penalties to the five IM operatives. After triggering a series of blasts that killed around 100 people and injured around 200 others, the terrorists, aided and abetted by their mentors from across the borders have been shocked at the death penalties, NIA sources said.

The confession­s made before the trial court by the convicts in the case would be helpful in solving other blast cases since 2007.

Yasin Bhatkal and Asadullah Akhtar were senior members in the terror network and they had a lot of informatio­n on IM modules across the country and the methods adopted by their mentor Riyaz Bhatkal, who is believed to be in Karachi, Pakistan.

Cherlapall­i Central Prison DIG, A. Narasimha told The Sunday Guardian on Thursday that the five IM convicts were presently being kept in solitary confinemen­t like any other death row convicts as per the prison manual.

The jail authoritie­s have stepped up security in and around the prison in view of the recent jailbreaks at other places in the country. The DIG said that around 120 security personnel would be deployed to monitor the cells where the IM convicts are lodged.

The decision to shift them also followed reports that radical Muslim groups might stoke passions among local Muslim youths on the issue. But Telangana cops have heaved a sigh of relief that there is no significan­t backlash from the local Muslims. Except Majlis Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM) MP Asaduddin Owaisi, who objected to the “near fast track completion” of trial of the Dilsukhnag­ar bomb blasts case by the NIA, there is no other criticism or protests by the Muslim groups. Owaisi pointed out why the NIA hadn’t taken interest to complete the trial of other previous terror cases where Hindus are accused. At the same time, Owaisi has made it clear that he was not objecting to the conviction of the IM operatives in the Dilsukhnag­ar blasts case.

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