File pic: Heavy security in the aftermath of riots in Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh
New Delhi:
The Delhi Police today said two
imams arrested for alleged links to Pakistan-based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba tried to recruit men in riot-hit Muzaffarnagar in Uttar Pradesh.
Teams of the Delhi Police Special Cell are in Muzaffarnagar to search for more alleged Lashkar operatives who are trying to recruit young men for terror. The Union Home ministry, however, says it is not convinced about the Lashkar link and more investigation is needed to support the Delhi Police's claim.
Senior Delhi Police officer SN Srivastav said two men from Muzaffarnagar have revealed they were approached by the arrested
imams, Mohd Rashid and Mohd Shahid, for a kidnapping plot, and were told that the ransom money could be used to build a mosque.
The two men, Liyaquat, a teacher with the Uttar Pradesh dducation department, and Zameer, a petty criminal, have deposed before a magistrate in Delhi and turned witnesses against the terror suspects.
The Delhi Police tracked them down after the arrested clerics allegedly confessed that they had been ordered by the Lashkar-e-Taiba to visit Muzaffarnagar and meet one of its old operative, Abdul Subhan, who allegedly advised them to make gradual inroads in the riot-affected region.
Rashid and Shahid reportedly made five to six visits to Muzaffarnagar and its neighbouring areas after meeting Subhan following the deadly communal clashes in September that left nearly 60 people dead and 40,000 displaced. They were arrested last month from Mewat in Haryana following inputs from the Intelligence Bureau on terror modules working in Muzaffarnagar and its neighbouring district Shamli.
The Delhi Police revelation sparked another political row linked to Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi's controversial comments at a rally in October that an intelligence officer had told him about the Pakistani ISI trying to recruit young men whose families suffered in the Muzaffarnagar riots.
"If this is correct, that some people of LeT went to Muzaffarnagar to encourage riot victims then what Rahul Gandhi said was true," said Congress leader Digvijaya Singh.
Azam Khan, a minister in Uttar Pradesh's Samajwadi government raised eyebrows with his comment that the Delhi police investigation was aimed at backing up the comments of the 'yuvraj' - a term used to deride Rahul Gandhi.