News Karnataka
Thursday, April 25 2024
Web

The Hunt for dreaded terrorist Yasin Bhatkal is still on

Photo Credit :

ON 13 July 2011, terror revisited Mumbai. Three powerful bombs exploded at Zaveri Bazaar, Opera House and Dadar, killing 26 people and injuring 130. This terror case throws up an interesting anecdote, which is pertinent today in the wake of reports that Indian Mujahideen (IM) leader Yasin Bhatkal, 40, had a hand in the recent blasts that rocked Hyderabad and Bengaluru.

It shows how Yasin Bhatkal alias Ahmed Siddibappa sent the security agencies on a wild-goose chase, if insiders in the Mumbai Anti-Terror Squad (ATS) are to be believed. After planting the bombs, Bhatkal returned to his rented apartment at Nagpada, a crowded area in south Mumbai, located barely half a kilometre from where Maharashtra ATS chief Rakesh Maria holds fort at a sprawling office.

Bhatkal managed to get there within hours of the blasts, at a time when the Mumbai Police had sealed all exit routes, jammed cell phone networks, beefed up surveillance across the state and rounded up more than 150 suspects. Bhatkal and his fellow operatives Waqas alias Ahmed and Tabrez alias Asadullah Akhtar, who the security agencies thought were Pakistan nationals but later turned out to be from Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh, went about their routine activities while the Mumbai Police groped in the dark for leads.

Bhatkal had rented the apartment since April 2011 and the three men quietly left the building after the blasts without collecting their security deposit from the landlord.

The details came to light when officers of the Mumbai ATS and the Delhi Police Special Cell pieced together information obtained from interrogation reports and CCTV footage from the blast sites in Mumbai. They came to the conclusion that the trio had planted the bombs in Mumbai and later that year in Pune. Their identities were revealed this February by Maria at a press conference in Mumbai.

Let’s turn the clock further back to February 2010, when a powerful explosion ripped apart the popular German Bakery in Pune, killing 17 people and injuring 60. Last week, a local court awarded the death sentence to Mirza Himayat Baig, an alleged IM operative who was the only individual arrested by the Maharashtra ATS in the case.

According to the chargesheet filed in the case, the main conspirator and the bomb planter was Bhatkal, who was seen carrying a backpack in the CCTV footage. Officials point out to Bhatkal’s audacity again when they narrate the manner in which he walked away from the blast site and visited Azam Campus, an educational institute in Pune, to meet his friends and offer prayers. Later, he is said to have stayed in Mumbai for a while before vanishing into thin air.

So, what is it about Yasin Bhatkal that makes him elude seasoned officers from anti-terror squads across India?

Hailing from Bhatkal, a coastal town in Karnataka that saw a spate of communal riots, Yasin Bhatkal was born in 1973 and studied at a madrasa at the Anjuman Hami-e-Muslimeen. In the early 1990s, he left for Pune.

There are fascinating stories that could well be the subject of a Bollywood potboiler about how Bhatkal was indoctrinated by the Shahbandari brothers — Riyaz and Iqbal Bhatkal (no relation to Yasin). The brothers were activists of the Students Islamic Movement of India before launching the IM. But considering the fact that the brothers have fled India, these details remain in the realm of speculation.

The information available in the public domain, if we are to believe the chargesheets filed by anti-terror agencies of 12 states, is that Bhatkal planted the bombs in at least 10 of the blasts that rocked the country since 2008 — Ahmedabad (2008), Surat (2008), Jaipur (2008), New Delhi (2008), Dashashwamedh Ghat in Varanasi (2010), Chinnaswamy Stadium in Bengaluru (2010), German Bakery in Pune (2011), Mumbai (2011), Hyderabad (2013) and Bengaluru (2013).

Intelligence officials, who have been tracking Bhatkal’s movements, claim that by the time they receive any intelligence input, he has already shifted base. They say Bhatkal is averse to technology and a master of disguise.

By Rana Ayyub  – Published in Tehelka Magazine

Share this:
MANY DROPS MAKE AN OCEAN
Support NewsKarnataka's quality independent journalism with a small contribution.

How useful was this post?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Nktv
Nktv Live

To get the latest news on WhatsApp