No Islamic State link to Ujjain train blast, says U.P. DGP Javeed Ahmed

‘Suspects were IS-inspired’

March 08, 2017 10:09 pm | Updated November 29, 2021 01:33 pm IST - New Delhi

A combo picture of the three accused — Danish Akhtar, Syed Mir Hussain and Atish Mohammad — being produced in a court in Bhopal on Wednesday in connection with Bhopal-Ujjain train blast case.

A combo picture of the three accused — Danish Akhtar, Syed Mir Hussain and Atish Mohammad — being produced in a court in Bhopal on Wednesday in connection with Bhopal-Ujjain train blast case.

A day after the Uttar Pradesh police issued a press statement that those involved in the Ujjain train blast belonged to the Islamic State, they retracted it, claiming there was no evidence linking these individuals to the terror group.

The U.P. police said the accused were “self-proclaimed” members of the terrorist group, and “they fancied themselves as being members of the IS.”

“There is nothing to show that they were part of the IS. They were self-proclaimed sympathisers of the outfit; their affiliation to the outfit was one-sided,” Javeed Ahmed, U.P. DGP, told The Hindu on Wednesday.

It was the Telangana police who had been tracking the online activities of the nine Uttar Pradesh-based men; it was on the basis of specific information provided by them that the Madhya Pradesh and U.P. police could nab the accused within hours of their allegedly planting a “pressure pipe bomb” on a train in Bhopal.

None of the police officers in M.P or U.P. could say why the accused, who were all living in a rented house in Lucknow, travelled more than 600 km to Bhopal to plant a bomb in a passenger train. The explosion left nine persons injured.

Another police official said: “The accused were under watch and we were tracking them. We sounded an alert after we noticed that three of them had travelled to Bhopal all of a sudden. We believe that they sensed they were under watch as they were frequently changing their online identities. They were getting directions from more than one handler, who claimed to be abroad.”

Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan claimed that Atif Muzaffar, a resident of Kanpur was the “mastermind of the attack” and the accused belonged to the Islamic State. “They clicked the photo of the bomb and sent it to their handler in Syria. One of them is a mechanic and they learnt the preparation of the bomb through Internet,” Mr. Chouhan told a news agency.

 

‘Engineering dropout’

Muzaffar, who is alleged to have travelled to Bhopal along with two others, Danish Akhtar and Syed Meer Hussain, to plant the bomb on the train, had dropped out of an engineering course he was pursuing at the Aligarh Muslim University.

“He failed in a physics paper and was expelled from college following that, was not doing much since then,” said an M.P. police official.

Muzaffar and others were staying in a rented house in Lucknow for the past two months and told their landlord that they were students. They left their homes in Kanpur and Kannauj saying they were moving to Lucknow for better prospects.

 

‘Self-radicalised team’

U.P. ATS chief Asim Arun told The Hindu , “It’s a self-proclaimed IS module. They are self-radicalised but whether the IS announced that these men were working for them, we don’t have any such information.”

The Home Ministry said on Wednesday that it was upset with the way the U.P. police handled the operation. They should have refrained from giving live commentary on television channels, it said.

A senior Home Ministry official said the Ujjain train blast case and the Lucknow encounter would be transferred for probe to the National Investigation Agency (NIA). NIA teams visited Ujjain and Lucknow on Wednesday.

“The U.P. police jumped the gun in claiming that the accused belonged to IS,” said the official.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.