The Free Press Journal

2 youths, accused of being ISIS members, plead guilty

- BHAVNA UCHIL

Two youths accused of being members of the banned terrorist organisati­on Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and instigatin­g youth in Malvani, Malad, to join the organisati­on in 2015, pleaded guilty

before a special court conducting their trial on Thursday.

On Thursday, Rizwan Ahmed, 25, and Mohsin Sayyed, 32, were produced before the court, as it was recording the testimony of a witness in the case. They both orally informed the court that they wanted to plead guilty. The youths had not discussed the same with their advocates. Their advocates Sharif Shaikh and Wahab Khan tried to advise them against their decision, but they would not budge. Special Judge under the NIA Act, A T Wankhede then told them to make a written applicatio­n pleading guilty on the next date when they are produced, if they decide to stick with their decision.

The case was initially probed by the Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) before being taken over by the NIA. The agency claimed the youths were hardcore followers of the ISIS ideology, its members and had conspired with absconding accused persons Ayaz Mohd Sultan and Yusuf Al-Hindi to propagate the ideology and propel youth to join the ISIS. It claimed that Al-Hindi was their handler and Ayaz had managed to get a visa in 2015 and gone to Kabul by taking a flight from New Delhi and joining the terrorist outfit.

Rizwan, it claimed, was an officer bearer or ‘Nawab Ameer’, of the Jundal Khilafa AlHind, an Indian organisati­on bearing allegiance to the ISIS. In 2018, the special court framed charges against the two under provisions of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA) dealing with conspiracy of terror activity, the membership of a terrorist organisati­on, support given to such outfit and for criminal conspiracy under the IPC. Both Rizwan and Mohsin were arrested in January 2016. Advocate Khan said he had withdrawn his representa­tion for Mohsin and would no longer appear for him. While the two did not give any reasons for pleading guilty, when earlier they had denied the charges and chosen to face trial, advocate Khan said, “The trial was proceeding very slowly. They had already lost six years in jail and the prosecutio­n was saying they had another 200 witnesses to go,” If found guilty, they could face life imprisonme­nt, said advocate Khan. Advocate Shahid Nadeem, part of the team that represents Rizwan, said they too would no longer represent Rizwan. He said, so far, 39 witnesses had testified, of whom two were star witnesses. Rizwan’s bail plea, rejected by the special court in May this year, was pending before the Bombay HC and scheduled for orders, said advocate Khan. In his bail plea before the special court, Rizwan had said he was young, had already been in prison for five years and suffers from tuberculos­is. He claimed that the prosecutio­n witnesses were already radicalise­d before meeting him. He further stated that the trial began in October 2018 and complained that there was an inordinate delay in the trial, with the prosecutio­n having examined only 28 witnesses by the time he had filed the plea and 200 witnesses remained to be examined.

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