Delhi police arrests Bhatkal, sent to 15 days custody
Indian Mujahideen co-founder Yasin Bhatkal and his close aide were on
Monday sent to custody of Delhi Police for 15 days after a court here
allowed the plea of the probe agency to arrest them in a case lodged in
2011 for allegedly setting up an illegal arms factory.
District Judge I.S. Mehta allowed the Delhi Police Special Cell to
arrest Yasin Bhatkal and his aide Asadullah Akhtar after they were
produced before it by NIA, Hyderabad which said the accused are not
required for custodial interrogation.
The district judge asked special cell sleuths to produce Bhatkal and
Akhtar before the designated court for trying the cases being probed by
the special cell of Delhi Police for seeking their custody.
The accused were then produced before Additional Sessions Judge Daya
Prakash who remanded both the accused to police custody for 15 days till
November 12.
Advocate M.S. Khan, appearing for the two, however, opposed the police
custody plea, saying the accused have already been investigated by the
NIA and the special cell has no locus standi to seek their fresh
custody.
Bhatkal and Akhtar was earlier taken to Hyderabad after being arrested
on September 21 and September 17 respectively by NIA’s Hyderabad unit in
connection with the Dilsukhnagar blast case that claimed 16 lives. The
blasts were triggered by IEDs planted near Konark and Venkatadiri
theatres on February 21 this year.
The court had earlier issued NBWs against Bhatkal and Akhtar in the
illegal arms factory case, in which the special cell had already
arrested 16 alleged IM men, as they were absconding since then.
The special cell had in November 2011, busted an illegal arms factory
located in Meer Vihar area of Nangloi in Outer Delhi and several alleged
IM suspects were arrested.
An FIR was registered against Bhatkal in the case on November 22, 2011
and later a non-bailable warrant was also issued against him for setting
up the factory.
According to Delhi Police, the weapons manufacturing unit had elaborate
equipment like moulding machine, cutting machine, assembly drilling
machine and grinding machine besides explosives and rocket launchers.
During the proceedings before the district judge on Monday, Bhatkal and
Akhtar informed the court that they were threatened by the NIA,
Hyderabad and were forced to write their confessional statements.
Defence counsel Khan argued that NIA, Hyderabad threatened to kill both
the accused in an encounter if they refused to write their statements as
desired by the agency.
The NIA, however, said the allegations are false and the accused were
not tortured. The agency also said that they were properly represented
by their counsel so there was no point of torturing them.
Meanwhile, Mohd Manjer Imam, another aide of Bhatkal who was arrested by
NIA in connection with terror strikes across the country since 2003,
was also produced before the district judge who extended his judicial
custody till November 11.
Seeking extension of judicial custody of Imam, NIA said its probe into the case was going on.
Bhatkal was taken to Hyderabad after he was arrested on September 21 by
NIA’s Hyderabad unit in connection with the Dilsukhnagar blast case that
claimed 16 lives. The blasts were triggered by IEDs planted near Konark
and Venkatadiri theatres on February 21. Akhtar was arrested in
connection with the blast case on September 17.
Bhatkal and Akhtar were earlier arrested by NIA in connection with a
case lodged for carrying out various terror strikes in the country.
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