Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Violent student politics to full-time crime: Chronicles of Capital’s gangs

- Prawesh Lama letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Politicall­y aware college students in the 2000s; the men behind organised crime in Delhi and Punjab; an internatio­nal connection; and gang wars -- these seemingly unconnecte­d strands came together in the killing of Sidhu Moose Wala on May 29.

The story starts in 2008, when Lawrence Bishnoi, son of a former Haryana police constable, a budding athlete, was preparing for the 1,500m race in the state open athletic championsh­ips. Bishnoi, who studied at the DAV school, Chandigarh, was a law student at Panjab University, but his dream was to represent the state in athletics. Not surprising­ly, he was a regular at the ground, as was Sampat Nehra, a Khalsa College student.

The two became close friends -and it is a friendship that lasted all these years -- and their names are etched together in Panjab University documents, police case files, even jail records. The Delhi and Punjab police say Sampat Nehra is gangster Bishnoi’s deputy.

But all that was long in the future in 2008 when only sport was on Bishnoi’s mind. It isn’t clear why Bishnoi and Nehra quit sports but police records show both were sucked into university politics the same year. Sometime that year, Bishnoi was jailed when he assaulted a rival candidate during elections to the Panjab University Students Union (PUSU). Bishnoi was a member of the Students of Panjab University (SOPU).

“Maybe he (Bishnoi) left sports and studies during those 2-3 months in jail. He returned to the university in late 2008 but was a different person. After returning he took full command of the SOPU. Campus fights became common, as did his jail visits. But they were petty cases,” a police officer said, citing Bishnoi’s statement made in November 2021 to the Delhi police.

In 2010, Bishnoi himself decided to contest. Campaignin­g for him were Nehra and another university student Goldy Brar. Police describe Brar as a Canada based gangster, who runs the Bishnoi gang from abroad.

All three men are now suspects in Moosewala’s murder.

“When Bishnoi lost that election, he along with Brar and Nehra, broke the legs of the winning candidate. That was their first crime together. Bishnoi formed his own gang in 2010. A year later, Bishnoi won the election. After that the three men continued to wield control over colleges in Punjab by fielding their candidates. There were many fights across colleges,” said a Delhi Police document dated November 2021.

But one fight was significan­t. At a government college in Muktsar Sahib, Punjab, during the elections, Bishnoi fielded his candidate. Opposing the candidate was Avtaar (identified by his first name in police report) of PUSU. One evening Bishnoi, Brar and four others shot Avtaar dead. This was Bishnoi and Brar’s first murder.

The year was 2013. Bishnoi was 21. The same year, 400km away, in Delhi’s Shraddhana­nd College, two other young men were making the news.

Jitender Gogi, a year older than Bishnoi, was the local volleyball star of Alipur, a semi-urban settlement in Delhi. Gogi had won medals in his school days at the local Bakhtwarpu­r government school. But sometime in 2008, around the same time when Bishnoi was lured into university politics, Gogi injured his hand in a road accident. He could never play volleyball again. Gogi has told police officers he was selected for the national games but the police have never found any evidence of this. But his sports career cut short, Gogi turned to crime.

By the time he graduated from school, Gogi was hanging out with local criminals at a shop in Alipur. Between 2008 and 2012, Gogi was arrested at least thrice for petty fights and assault. But it wasn’t until 2013, when he crossed paths with his childhood friend Sunil Maan alias Tillu, at Shraddhana­nd College, that things would take a turn for the worse.

“If Bishnoi met boys who would become his friends for life, even commit crimes together, Gogi’s lifelong rivalry with Tillu started in college. The two ended up supporting different candidates for the college elections. Gogi was arrested for attacking Tillu’s friend that year. Over the years, the two would form their own gangs and compete to control Delhi’s crime network,” said a second police officer who asked not to be named.

And it would kick-start a rivalry that would shed blood across the national capital.

And much like Bishnoi met his closest aide in college, Gogi met his, Kuldeep Fajja at the Delhi University College. The two, in later years would become Delhi’s top gangsters. Police describe Fajja, who died in a police shooting last year, as Gogi’s second-in-command. At least two dozen people, all gangsters have died on account of the decade-long rivalry between Tillu and Gogi. Gogi himself was killed by Tillu’s gang in a daring shooting inside a court room in Rohini last year.

So, how is Punjab connected to all this? The Delhi Police’s investigat­ions have revealed that both Tillu and Gogi sought help from gangsters in Punjab and Haryana as they battled each other.

Last Sunday, within hours of Punjab Police’s announceme­nt that Bishnoi and Goldy Brar were the main suspects in singer Moosewala’s killing, a message on the unverified Instagram account of gangster Tillu read – We will take revenge against Bishnoi and Goldy. Rest in Peace Sidhu Moosewala. But why was a jailed Delhi gangster threatenin­g to avenge Moosewala’s murder? And how did Bishnoi get involved in Delhi’s crime scene? Delhi Police believe the genesis of all this was the void in Delhi’s crime world sometime between 2014 and 2015.

Before 2013, Delhi was controlled by two gangs – those of Neeraj Bawana and Nitu Dabodia -- that fought bloody turf wars on the capital’s streets. Dabodia died in a police encounter in 2013; Bawana was arrested in 2015.

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