The Sunday Guardian

ZAKIR NAIK WAS QUESTIONED IN ARMS HAUL CASE IN 2006

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until now. But if he is called, he is willing to co-operate 100%,” he told this correspond­ent. “During our probe of the May 2006 Aurangabad arms haul case, we found that Feroz Deshmukh was continuous­ly in touch with Rahil Sheikh. The Maharashtr­a ATS and the Delhi Special Cell formed a team to nab Rahil, who escaped from his Grant Road house after jumping from a wall. He later sneaked into Bangladesh. Even Abu Jundal crossed over to Bangladesh to avoid the security agencies. They were found to be in continuous touch with Feroz Deshmukh. He was thus booked. He is currently out on bail,” Raghuvansh­i said.

Way before that, in 2003, Zakir Naik was on the radar of the anti-terror agency after several blasts ripped through Mumbai between 2002 and 2003. The accused in these blasts were alleged to be inspired by Zakir Naik. “In 2003, during investigat­ion into the blasts from 2002 to August 2003, Zakir Naik and his institute IRF were on the ATS radar,” a top IPS officer told The Sunday Guardian on the condition of anonymity. “It may be that the com- mon link for the youths to join terror from Mumbra, Kalyan, Meera Road or Hyderabad is that they are inspired by Zakir Naik’s speeches,” claimed Feroze Mithiborwa­la, a secular Islamic scholar. The claim has been vehemently denied by Mubarak Kapdi, Naik’s brother-in-law. “Even in the year 2011, when I was the Police Commission­er of Thane, Zakir Naik had approached the police to seek permission for holding a rally in Mumbra, a Muslim-dominated area of Thane. At that time, a large delegation of Muslims had opposed it on the grounds that this man gave provocativ­e and divisive speeches, and that his rally might cause a law and order problem in the area. I had thus denied him permission then,” said Raghuvansh­i.

The next year, he was denied permission by the Mumbai Police to hold his yearly “peace conference” at the city’s Somaiya ground. He had been holding the conference there since 2007. The event used to be attended by thousands of people. But the Mumbai Police was wary of giving him permission in 2012 after his provocativ­e speeches offended both Muslims and Hindus the previous year. Local media reports said that he has not been granted permission after that to hold any rallies in Mumbai. Kapdi said that Naik never sought permission to hold his conference in Mumbai after that. “See, he has always been known as a man who gave inciting and provocativ­e speeches. But apart from that, there was never any evidence against him. If you ask me if he could be booked only on that basis at that time, I would still maintain, he couldn’t be. He was on the radar for some time after the Ghatkopar blast in 2002,” a retired Mumbai Police officer, who played a pivotal role in the probe of many terror cases, told The Sunday Guardian.

Currently, the Mumbai Police’s Special Branch is probing Dr Zakir Naik’s speeches, CDs, books and his organisati­on Islamic Research Foundation (IRF). Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis had asked Mumbai Police Commission­er Datta Padsalgika­r to look into Naik’s speeches. “We will complete the probe as soon as possible, though there is no deadline. We are currently scanning through his material, speeches and books,” Mumbai Police Commission­er Datta Padsalgika­r told The Sunday Guardian. When asked if Naik would be summoned for questionin­g, he said, “Depending on the outcome of the inquiry, we will call him if we require any clarificat­ion.”

Security agencies looking into the funding of IRF have gathered momentum after former Mumbai Police Commission­er and current BJP MP, Satyapal Singh claimed that his report against IRF’s funding was ignored by then UPA government. He has sought a ban on IRF by Foreign Contributi­on (Regulation) Act (FCRA) for contraveni­ng its norms. At present, the security agencies, including the National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA) and the Maharashtr­a Police are scrutinisi­ng Zakir Naik’s speeches, books and CDs to check objectiona­ble contents. The statements of terrorists belonging to various organisati­ons who have been arrested here, are also being screened for references to him. Media reports have claimed that wanted terrorist Hafiz Saeed’s Jamat ud Dawa’s website has a direct link to Naik’s Islamic Research Foundation website.

BJP’s ruling ally Shiv Sena has demanded a ban on Zakir Naik and his channel, Peace TV. In a letter written to Home Minister Rajnath Singh, Shiv Sena’s Arvind Sawant has demanded that Naik should not be allowed to enter India.

 ??  ?? A labourer dries fish at the Kasimedu fishing harbour in Chennai on Saturday. AFP
A labourer dries fish at the Kasimedu fishing harbour in Chennai on Saturday. AFP

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