If the Hyderabad blasts have brought Bangladesh-based Harkat-ul-Jehad-e-Islami (HUJI) under the scanner, nothing highlights the failure of the government to tackle this group than the stalled investigation into the March 7, 2006 serial blasts in Varanasi that killed 16 people — at the Sankatmochan temple and the railway station — and in which HUJI is the prime suspect.
Consider these:
• The Varanasi attack is perhaps the only one in the past three years where the alleged bombers were identified. New Delhi even sent the names of Bangladeshis Mustafeez, Jakaria and Bashiruddin — with their native towns and mobile phone numbers — to Dhaka during the Home Secretary-level talks last year but to no avail. The bombers had earlier studied in Deoband.
• As per records, the police arrested Waliullah, a cleric from Phoolpur in Allahabad district, on April 5, 2006, for allegedly harbouring the three “bombers,” a charge his family denies. But Waliullah’s interrogation report mentions Bangladesh-based HUJI operation commander Assadullah Munir-ul-Islam, who is also one of the mentors of Hyderabad twin blast accused Shahid Bilal.
• The Varanasi devices were placed in pressure cookers — the same technique and device used in 2005 Delhi serial blasts and in Mumbai train serial blasts later in 2006. But no one knows how to join these dots.
• Waliullah. who is in a Ghaziabad jail, mentions the name of a sitting UP MP for his “political patronage.” But the MP is absconding.
It’s the modus operandi of HUJI operatives in Varanasi that came as an eye-opener for security agencies. Waliullah, in his interrogation report, claims that Mustafeez, Jakaria and Bashiruddin crossed over from Bangladesh to India on March 5 and reached his madrassa with explosives.
The next day, Bashiruddin went on a recce mission with Waliullah from Allahabad to Varanasi while the other two prepared the IEDs. They identified the targets — Gowdhulia ghat, the railway station and the Sankatmochan temple — and returned to Allahabad the same day after picking up three pressure cookers. Waliullah says he left his mobile phone in Phoolpur so that his location could not be traced.
On the fateful day, Waliullah claims, the bombers left with IEDs in the bags and with instructions not to be in touch with each other. That was the last Waliullah saw of them and in the evening, the bombs exploded. The bombers escaped back to Bangladesh.
Charges were framed against Waliullah in a Ghaziabad court last month. “The addresses are being verified,” is the one line written in the official record of the Varanasi blast case regarding police efforts to nab the bombers.
This January, a team headed by an inspector was constituted by the Varanasi Range DIG to ascertain the identity of the three accused persons. “We are trying to collect details of their addresses. We have communicated to the police of other states to help us ascertain the identity of the three accused persons,” Varanasi SSP S B Shiradkar told The Indian Express.
Police have named six as accused. Besides Mustafeez, Jakaria and Bashiruddin, the names of Waliullah, Shamim and Zubair figured in the FIR as the accused persons of the case. While Zubair, a resident of UP’s Baghpat district, was killed in an encounter with police in Jammu and Kashmir, Shamim has been declared as a proclaimed absconder. Shamim is a resident of Lawanda village under the Alinagar police station of Chandauli district. The police have also announced a reward of Rs 10,000 for his arrest. The police attached his properties on November 24, 2006.
1 detained in Hyderabad
HYDERABAD: A person bearing a resemblance to the sketch of a suspect in the Lumbini Park blast case was detained by the city police on Thursday. The man was picked up after passengers of a city-bound bus informed the police that a person travelling with them bore a resemblance to the sketch.
(Tomorrow : Delhi serial blasts and the Kashmiri innovation)