The Sunday Guardian

Pm modi stressed to uae need to corner dawood

India had shared with UAE relevant documents listing the details of property owned by the fugitive criminal and his associates.

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The government had submitted relevant document s l i sting the details of property owned by fugitive criminal Dawood Ibrahim Kaskar and his associates to the Government of United Arab Emirates in August 2015. It was after this that the UAE government, which has been promoting itself as the safest internatio­nal hub for investment, started acting against the holders of these properties, mostly the benami ones, and auctioned them after taking them over.

The Sunday Guardian’s re- quest to relevant government officials in the United Arab Emirates for their response on the matter did not elicit a reply till the time of going to press.

Intelligen­ce sources, however, confirmed that the UAE government had started acting on the informatio­n shared by the Indian government in 2015.

It is pertinent to mention that the wedding of Mahrukh, daughter of the 61-year-old Dawood Ibrahim, with cricketer Javed Miandad’s son Junaid, had taken place in Dubai in July 2015, just one month before Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Dubai, during which, according to officials, the Indian delegation that included National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, submitted a lengthy dossier detailing the properties owned by Dawood and his associates. The PM, according to Intelligen­ce officials, had personally stressed on the need to take immediate action on the basis of the informatio­n provided in the dossier to the UAE officials.

Officials aware of the developmen­t said that Dawood, who did not attend the wedding of his daughter and used video conferenci­ng to interact with the guests, has lost his “hold” that he once had in Dubai. “He has very few friends left now. After 26/11, Dubai changed its outlook towards terrorism and terrorists. It does not want itself to be identified as a safe haven for terrorists. It has spent and is spending billions of dollars to promote itself as a global investment hub. Dawood’s financial prowess has decreased significan­tly in the last 3-4 years and it is just a matter of time when his chapter closes, one way or the other,” an official said.

Officials said that there was a very strong possibilit­y that Dawood, who is ailing due to kidney problems, might “come back” or be brought back to India. “That cannot be ruled out; it is a decision that will be taken at the very highest level,” the official said.

However, according to officials, the decision to “arrange” for his “capture” is fraught with a lot of risks, both from external sources and sources within India, as his questionin­g by Indian authoritie­s and subsequent disclosure­s might affect a long list of names including those mentioned in the Narinder Nath Vohra Committee that had written about how certain high ranking politician­s had helped him and taken his cooperatio­n. The separatist leaders of Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a (KP), one of the four provinces of Pakistan, are finding it hard to get asylum in India. So far, one or two separatist leaders have managed to travel to India to mobilise the Pakhtoons living here and to seek support from Indians and the Indian government. While overlappin­g visa laws and unclear asylum rules in India still need streamlini­ng, Pakhtoon separatist leaders have urged the Indian government to listen to the hardship of people in Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a.

Umar Daud Khattak, a separatist leader from Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a, who escaped from the Pakistan army into Afghanista­n, is the youngest Pakhtoon separatist leader who has been travelling to India over the past two years.

Speaking about the asylum challenges of a separatist leader, Khattak said, “I have been to India about six times and have applied for visa about four times. The last two times I applied for visa at Shaheer Travels, an Indian government authorised visa applicatio­n center (VAC) in Kabul, the staff behaved badly. It took me three days more compared to other people whose doc-

 ?? HO/Pacific investment Corporatio­n/ AFP ?? Undated handout picture released by Pacific Investment Corporatio­n showing actor Prabhakar Sharan and actress Nancy Dobles during the shooting of a scene of the first traditiona­l Bollywood style film shot in Latin America in San Jose, Costa Rica. The...
HO/Pacific investment Corporatio­n/ AFP Undated handout picture released by Pacific Investment Corporatio­n showing actor Prabhakar Sharan and actress Nancy Dobles during the shooting of a scene of the first traditiona­l Bollywood style film shot in Latin America in San Jose, Costa Rica. The...

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