From suspect to witness: two days in the life of Ismail

He wanted to board the flight from Pune because air fare was cheapest there, says father.

April 09, 2016 02:16 am | Updated November 16, 2021 04:54 pm IST - NEW DELHI:

Mohammed Ismail

Mohammed Ismail

A hunt for the cheapest ticket to reach his place of work in Dubai landed Ismail Bhatkal in trouble at the Pune airport on Monday evening. The nightmare that followed lasted for two whole days.

“Ye zulm ho raha hai hum par, ye galat hai [This is injustice and whatever happened was not right],” says a distraught Abdul Raoof, father of Ismail Musab Raoof Ahmed, who was detained at the airport by intelligence agencies, who suspected he was travelling to Syria to join the Islamic State. Ismail was released by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Wednesday night after agencies verified his antecedents.

Daily wage earner

Abdul Raoof, Ismail’s father, told The Hindu on the phone from Mumbai: “My son has been released but has been asked to be in Mumbai for now. He was on his way to Dubai to earn money. He got his visa only 10 days ago. They have not said why he was arrested.” Raoof sells raw sevai (sweet dish) in Bhatkal, Karnataka. His son is a daily wage labourer. This was not the first time that Ismail had flown out of the country.

He got his passport in 2015 and first went to Dubai 10 months ago.

A senior NIA official said a look out circular (LOC) had been issued in Ismail’s name and as soon as he reached the immigration desk at the Pune airport, he was handed over to the agencies.

Raoof said his son chose to travel to Pune to catch a flight to Dubai as he was getting cheaper tickets there. “We checked the air fare at the Bangalore and Mumbai airports. It was anywhere between Rs.22,000 and Rs.25,000. The ticket was cheapest at the Pune airport: Rs. 12,000 for an Air India flight to Dubai. It made sense to board the flight there.”

The NIA official declined to say Ismail’s detention was a case of mistaken identity. “There is a thin line between being a suspect and a witness. For now, we have released him but we might make him a witness in our case. Since the LOC was issued in his name and details matched, we are still verifying his claims,” said an NIA official.

S.K. Singh, Inspector-General, NIA, however, said on Friday: “Ismail has been released.”

An NIA official explained that the LOC against Ismail was issued as his name had cropped up during the interrogation of Mudabbir Sheikh, a Mumbra resident, who was arrested in January during the nationwide raids to unearth an alleged plot to establish an Islamic State-backed caliphate here. Sheikh had received hawala money on two occasions. The funds were to be used to assemble Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and bombs to target places of importance, politicians and policemen. Investigators said that during his interrogation, the name of one Raoof had surfaced, and based on information provided by a ground source, Ismail’s name was put on that list.

“Had they wanted to arrest him, they could have arrested him at Bhatkal itself; they had his name and address. Why did they wait for him to reach the Pune airport,” asked a friend.

Responding to this, an NIA official said: “We had gone to Bhatkal to trace him, but he was nowhere to be found. This is why, we opened an LOC against him so that he did not leave the country.”

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