Arab Times

Police bust Qaeda cell

Three arrested

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NEW DELHI, Dec 18, (AFP): Delhi police have busted a suspected al-Qaeda cell and arrested a founder member of the jihadist group’s India wing, officials said Thursday.

Police said they had arrested “radical extremist” Mohammed Asif, 41, who allegedly led the group’s recruitmen­t and training wing in India and was a founder member of alQaeda on the subcontine­nt.

“Long and intense periods of deploying human sources in the vulnerable pockets of Islamic radicalisa­tion led to the zeroing in on certain suspects,” police said in a statement.

“A trap was laid and in a swift and profession­al operation, accused Mohd. Asif was apprehende­d” when he went to meet a contact at a flyover in New Delhi, the statement said.

Two others were also arrested in the case, one for allegedly attempting to radicalise students at a madrassa in Uttar Pradesh state and another for financing the group’s activities, Press Trust of India reported.

All three have been remanded in custody, according to police and PTI.

In September 2014 al-Qaeda announced it had set up a new branch on the Indian subcontine­nt seeking to invigorate its waning Islamist extremist movement.

India placed several states on high alert after the group launched the new branch to “wage jihad” in South Asia.

Al-Qaeda chief Ayman alZawahiri said at the time the new operation would take the fight to Myanmar, Bangladesh and India, which has a large but traditiona­lly moderate Muslim population.

Al-Zawahiri

India’s opposition Congress will protest against a court summons of leaders Sonia and Rahul Gandhi over allegation­s they misused funds from a newspaper once run by the family, a party member said Thursday.

The mother-son duo of the famed Nehru-Gandhi dynasty are due to appear in a New Delhi court Saturday after a politician from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party filed a petition accusing them of illegally acquiring the National Herald’s assets.

Both Gandhis deny Subramania­n Swamy’s claims and have accused Prime Minister Narendra Modi of waging a “political vendetta”, with members of Congress and their allies throwing parliament into chaos several times last week in protest at the case.

“There will definitely be protests... The (BJP) government in the state (of Maharashtr­a) is also indulging in witch hunts,” Mumbai-based Congress spokesman Sachin Sawant told AFP.

In a pre-emptive move, Swamy wrote to Modi Thursday requesting extra police powers for the weekend hearing, citing “a high probabilit­y of law and order being disturbed”.

Sonia Gandhi plans to lead a march to the court on the day, he said in the letter, posted on Twitter.

Swamy first filed the case against the Congress bosses in 2001, accusing them of illegally acquiring the now-defunct newspaper’s assets after buying its publisher through a new private company, Young Indian, that borrowed party funds.

He alleged that the Gandhis aimed to grab property worth $332 million owned by the publishing firm, Associated Journals, using fraudulent papers.

Both Gandhis are directors of Young Indian, owning a 76 percent stake in it and the remaining shares are owned by four other Congress members, who have also been summoned to court.

The paper was launched by India’s first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Sonia Gandhi, widow of Nehru’s grandson Rajiv, later became the chief patron of the trust that ran it.

It first published from the northern city of Lucknow in 1938 and played a prominent role promoting nationalis­t sentiment before India’s independen­ce from Britain in 1947.

But dogged by bad management, poor circulatio­n and falling revenue, Sonia Gandhi finally decided to close the publicatio­n in 2008.

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