Hindustan Times (Delhi)

7 nabbed for head constable Rattan Lal’s murder

- Shiv Sunny shiv.sunny@hindustant­imes.com

THE FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OF ALL THE SEVEN ARRESTED MEN REFUTED THE ALLEGATION­S THAT THEY HAD KILLED THE POLICEMAN AND DENIED THAT THEY WERE EVEN NEAR THE MURDER SPOT

nNEWDELHI: Five garments traders and a property dealer from Chand Bagh, and a cab driver from Ghaziabad, have been arrested for killing head constable Rattan Lal in the north-east Delhi riots, the police said on Thursday and listed “videos and photograph­s, statements of eyewitness­es and technical evidence” which helped in identifyin­g the suspects.

The families and friends of all the seven arrested men refuted the allegation­s that they had killed the policeman and denied that they were even near the murder spot.

Lal’s death was the first reported casualty when incidents of stone pelting in north-east Delhi on February 23 turned into a full-blown communal riot the next morning.

FIVE FROM ONE LANE

Five of the seven suspects live in the same lane in Chand Bagh. On Thursday, the relatives of one of them, 33-year-old property dealer Mohammad Jalaluddin, looked surprised on knowing that he had been arrested for murder.

“He was told that his help was being sought to identify other rioters,” said Jalaluddin’s brother, Mehtab, who insisted that his brother had only briefly ventured out of home on February 24 to see what was happening.

A few buildings away, the wife of 35-year-old Mohammad Ayub, peeped from her window to accuse the police of arresting a man who had “stayed home” after closing his shop. “The police visited him repeatedly at his shop for two days before arresting him. If he had killed a policeman, wouldn’t he have gone undergroun­d,” said the wife.

Ayub’s younger brother, Yunus, who lives in lane number eight, too has been arrested for the policeman’s murder.

‘ONLY DEFENDING US’ Their mother, Sareefan, who lives with Yunus, acknowledg­ed that he was among the rioters and carried a rod, but denied he was a killer. “When the rival mob was shooting towards our colony, some people handed him an iron rod to defend us. Was it wrong for him to defend our homes and our women?” Sareefan asked.

The mother of another accused, 27-year-old Mohammad Arif, insisted that her son was with her during the two entire days of the rioting. “I got his garments shop closed and brought him home,” said Anwari.

His father, Mohammad Mushtaq, however, said before Arif could be brought home, he was captured by a CCTV camera while standing outside his shop. “Is merely standing in a lane a crime? There was no weapon in his hands,” said Mushtaq.

In the same lane, a dozen employees of garments exporter, 46-year-old Mohammad Saleem Khan, are yet to receive their salaries since he has been arrested for the same murder. “He was in his office the entire two days of the riots. We were with him. We’ll testify in court in his favour if need be,” said one employee.

The relatives of another arrested garments trader, 38-year-old Saleem Malik, insisted he was innocent, but refused to speak any more. “We don’t trust media,” said a relative.

The seventh man arrested for this murder is a resident of Loni in Ghaziabad. The cab driver, 23-year-old Mohammad Danish, is so far the only arrested man the Delhi Police have so far specifical­ly identified as an “outsider” directly involved in the riots.

Danish’s mother, Tabassum Khan, said her son had no criminal antecedent­s and that he had gone to meet his sister in another part of Ghaziabad when the riots had erupted. She insisted that he had stayed at his sister’s home in Lalbagh Colony that day and had nothing to do with the riots.

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