Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

PREACHER NAIK FACES FIR, BAN ON TV CHANNEL

- Rajesh Ahuja ■ rajesh.ahuja@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The government is closing in on controvers­ial TV evangelist Dr Zakir Naik with a multiprong­ed plan of action that may include the registrati­on of an FIR by the NIA, taking his Peace TV off cable television and a review of permission to his outfit to get foreign aid, official sources said.

Naik, a doctor-turned-preacher, has always been on the radar of security agencies for making statements like “If Osama bin Laden is terrorisin­g the US, I am with him” .

But he has come under renewed focus after authoritie­s in Bangladesh linked him to last week’s terror strike on a Dhaka café, saying some of the attackers were inspired by his speeches. The assault claimed by the Islamic State left 20 people dead, including a 19-year-old Indian girl.

“We have taken cognisance of Zakir Naik’s speeches and given instructio­ns for a probe. CDs of his speeches are being examined,” home minister Rajnath Singh said Friday. “The National Investigat­ion Agency is planning to register an FIR against Zakir Naik. Legal opinion is being sought,” a ministry official said.

Singh is learnt to have discussed the matter with NIA director general Sharad Kumar.

The home ministry is also reviewing permission to Naik’s Islamic Research Foundation to receive donations from abroad under the Foreign Contributi­on Regulation Act.

The informatio­n and broadcasti­ng ministry has decided to direct cable operators to black out Naik’s Peace TV, which is not licensed in India and is uplinked from Dubai. The channel is banned in several countries.

The I&B ministry held a meeting — attended by representa­tives from the home ministry, intelligen­ce agencies and NIA — to discuss all unlicensed channels broadcast in the country.

“It was decided that strict action will be taken against cable or multi-system operators who stream unlicensed channels, including Peace TV. The Intelligen­ce Bureau and NIA have been asked to examine the contents of Peace TV in particular,” said the home ministry official.

“If any content is broadcast in violation of guidelines, action will be taken against them to the extent of confiscati­on of their entire broadcasti­ng equipment,” minister of state (I&B) Rajyavardh­an Singh Rahore said. Mumbaibase­d Naik has denied Dhaka’s allegation, saying in a video message that while one of the attackers may have been his fan, he has thousands of such fans in Bangladesh.

The cleric is in Saudi Arabia and scheduled to return on July 11. But security sources said he may not come back immediatel­y.

Controvers­y dogs the 50-year-old with his entry banned in the UK, Canada and Malaysia. He is under investigat­ion in Mumbai in a 2013 hate speech case. And his Islamic Research Foundation is listed as a religious learning centre on the website of the Jamaat-ud-Dawa, considered a front for Pakistani terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba.

But Naik also has a legion of fans. Last year, the Saudi king conferred on him the King Faisal Internatio­nal Prize — which comprises a $200,000 prize, gold medal and citation — for being a promoter of Islam. Naik’s son, Fariq, is studying in Saudi Arabia and also gives speeches on Islam.

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