Leaders of a community were on PFI ‘hit ­list’, says NIA

September 23, 2022 10:43 pm | Updated September 24, 2022 03:55 pm IST - NEW DELHI:

Assam Police take two PFI members to the court after their arrest in Guwahati on September 23, 2022.

Assam Police take two PFI members to the court after their arrest in Guwahati on September 23, 2022. | Photo Credit: PTI

Investigation agency said the accused indulged in organised crime and unlawful activities to terrorise other religious groups; Popular Front of India describes arrests as ‘witch-hunt’

The National Investigation Agency (NIA), which arrested 45 of the 109 leaders and activists of the Popular Front of India (PFI) during a nationwide crackdown along with the Enforcement Directorate (ED) and the police across 15 States on Thursday, has seized documents revealing that prominent leaders of a particular community were allegedly on target.

In one of the cases involving 10 arrested persons, the NIA has submitted before a Kerala court that it found a “hit list” during the searches. The agency said the accused indulged in organised crimes and unlawful activities repeatedly to terrorise other religious sections of the society. The PFI has condemned the raids and described the arrests as “unjust” and a witch-hunt against its members and supporters.

“The outfit, its office-bearers, members and affiliates conspired to indulge in unlawful activities, encouraged the ‘vulnerable’ youth to join terror outfits like Lashkar-e-Taiba, IS and al-Qaeda and also conspired to establish Islamic rule in India by committing terrorist act... The accused spread disaffection against India through wrongful interpretation of government policies among their community to promote hatred against the State and its machineries,” the NIA has alleged.

Funds from abroad

Based on its findings, the ED has alleged that the organisation had thousands of active members in the Gulf countries and that the outfit raised substantial funds from abroad in a well-organised and structured manner. In his statement to the agency, former PFI treasurer P. Koya — who was among those arrested by the NIA on Thursday — had earlier denied the presence of PFI supporters abroad, claiming that the outfit did not receive any money from overseas as part of its “established policy”.

However, the documents seized by the agency during the previous searches revealed otherwise. The funds collected abroad were transferred to India via the “hawala” or other channels, as corroborated by another accused K.A. Rauf Sherif, arrested previously.

Following the same trail, the ED arrested Perwez Ahmed, Mohammed Iliyas and Abdul Muqeet in Delhi, while one Muhammed Shafeeque Payeth was picked up from Kozhikode. They have been accused of being part of a network through which funds were collected from overseas and within the country. The agency’s money laundering probe has revealed that over ₹120 crore were allegedly deposited in the accounts of the PFI and its related entities over the years, mostly deposited in cash.

According to the ED, the PFI leaders and related entities were developing a residential project in Kerala’s Munnar to launder the money collected from foreign countries and domestic collections. Accused Payeth had also transferred about ₹40 lakh to Rauf Sherif from Qatar. Till 2018, he worked as a business development manager for Gulf Thejas daily, an arm of Thejas Newspaper published by Intermedia Publishing Limited, in which PFI member Abdul Razak BP was a director. In March, the ED had arrested Abdul Razak at Kerala’s Kozhikode airport.

While multiple agencies have launched investigations, the coordinated raids on Thursday may not lead to an imminent ban on the PFI as the government intends to tie up loose ends, according to a senior government official who said several aspects were to be ascertained before declaring the outfit an “unlawful association“ under the anti-terror Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

Telangana case

A First Information Report (FIR) registered by the Telangana’s Nizamabad police in July is one of the key cases that formed the basis for countrywide searches. The case was transferred to the NIA by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) on August 26 considering the “gravity of the offence and its repercussions on national security.”

The police had named 27 persons in the case after they raided the house of one Abdul Khader, who had rented a portion of the terrace to PFI members for conducting physical training under the garb of “karate classes”. On the premises, the police found a flex board with Popular Front of India (PFI) written on it, bamboo sticks. white board, a small podium, notebooks, handbooks, loose paper sheets and two mobile phones.

The MHA said the recoveries pointed to a “conspiracy to wage war against the Government of India.” In its order transferring the case to the NIA, the Ministry said Khader received ₹6 lakh and allowed the premises to be used for imparting training to the PFI cadre. It said the PFI members provoked the youth visiting Khader’s house for karate classes “against a particular community with their hate speeches”.

After Khader’s arrest, the PFI had said he was a “martial arts trainer by profession for decades and had been teaching people from across the State”.

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