Millennium Post

Narco-terrorist with links to Kashmiri terror groups nabbed by NIA in Haryana

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: After being on the run for nearly a year, the National Investigat­ion Agency on Saturday nabbed Ranjit Singh, a notorious narco-terrorist , from Sirsa as he was acting as a conduit of Pakistanba­sed terror groups in pushing drugs into India, the proceeds of which were used for terror activities. The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), along with the Punjab and Haryana police arrested Singh alias Cheeta, a resident of Amritsar, in an intelligen­ce-based operation from Sirsa in Haryana, the agency said in a statement.

The NIA had registered a case in June last year and filed the first charge sheet against 15 people, including Singh, and four companies, in December the same year. The NIA spokesman, said in the statement, that an investigat­ion into a drug case had led to the fact that Pakistan-based terrorist organisati­ons were using narcotic trade to generate funds for terror activities in India.

The proceeds of narcotic trade are transferre­d to Kashmir valley through couriers and hawala channel for terror purposes, it said.

Singh is also the prime accused in the recent Hizbul Mujahideen terror funding module. The module was busted with the arrest of Hilal Ahmad Wagay, a resident of

Nowgam, Awantipora of south Kashmir with Rs 29 lakh cash, by Punjab Police in Amritsar in April this year. This money was being transporte­d to the Kashmir valley, which was to be handed over to Reyaz Naikoo, so-called operationa­l commander of the terror group. Naikoo was recently killed by security forces in his village in Kashmir's Pulwama district.

The case was taken over by the NIA on Friday and investigat­ions have begun.

Singh, along with coaccused Iqbal Singh, are the prime accused in the case related to seizure of 532 kg of heroin hidden in a consignmen­t of rock salt imported from Pakistan.

 ??  ?? A labourer works at a salt pan, during a nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the Coronaviru­s, at Marakkanam in Viluppuram district. Spread over 4,000 acres, the Marakkanam salt pans are the third largest producer of salt in Tamil Nadu
A labourer works at a salt pan, during a nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against the Coronaviru­s, at Marakkanam in Viluppuram district. Spread over 4,000 acres, the Marakkanam salt pans are the third largest producer of salt in Tamil Nadu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India