ISI agent who wanted to 'create maythem' in India flees to Pak. from UAE

Shafi Sheikh played a key role in mobilising people in Nepal and India to plant explosives on a railway track in Bihar last year

Updated - November 29, 2021 01:28 pm IST - New Delhi

The Indore-Patna Express derailed near Kanpur on November 20 last year. Rajeev Bhatt

The Indore-Patna Express derailed near Kanpur on November 20 last year. Rajeev Bhatt

ISI agent Shafi Sheikh, who played a key role in mobilising people in Nepal and India to plant explosives on a railway track in Bihar last year, is said to have fled to Pakistan from Dubai, where he was staying, a senior Home Ministry official said.

Before India and Nepal (where he is wanted in a double murder case) could request the UAE authorities to seek his custody, he left for Pakistan. Sheikh has been on the radar of intelligence agencies for long and has also been accused of pumping in fake currency into India through Nepal.

Shafi Sheikh

Shafi Sheikh

 

Nepal contact

Shamshul Hoda, a Nepalese businessman who first met the Pakistani national in Malaysia, then in Karachi and on several occasions in Dubai, told a National Investigation Agency (NIA) team, which interrogated him in Kathmandu last month, that the latter had asked him to “create mayhem” in India.

The Nepal police arrested Hoda on his return from Dubai on February 2 for his alleged involvement in the murder of two people, who were initially hired to carry out “spectacular incidents in India.”

While Hoda confirmed that he was asked by Sheikh to plant explosives at Ghorasan in Motihari, Bihar, on October 1 last, he told the NIA team that he was unaware of any such plan with regard to the Kanpur and Kuneru (Andhra Pradesh) railway derailments.

Karachi visit

Hoda told the Nepal police that he went to Karachi seven months back on Sheikh’s invitation, where he allegedly met three other persons.

“Hoda told us that he was not sure about the association of Shafi [Sheikh] and three others with Pakistan’s ISI but he says he was asked to do something spectacular in India. He says he stayed in a bungalow at Karachi for two days, where he was treated well and asked to rope in his local contacts to create trouble in India,” a Nepal police official said.

The NIA was tasked with investigating the three railway accidents for any terror related conspiracy after Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu shot off a letter to Home Minister Rajnath Singh alleging “sabotage.”

Mr. Prabhu sent the letter after Moti Paswan, one of the three persons arrested by the Bihar police in January for his alleged involvement in planting a pressure cooker bomb at Ghorasan, claimed to have planted the bomb in Kanpur, which led to the derailment of the Indore-Patna Express on November 20 last year.

However, when an NIA team quizzed him, Paswan said he was only boasting about his involvement. “Bihar police has told us that after Paswan, recently two more people arrested for other criminal offences confessed on their own to have committed the Kanpur accident; we are not sure about the claims and are investigating,” said a senior NIA official.

At an election rally in Gonda, Uttar Pradesh, on February 23, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the Kanpur accident was “a conspiracy and conspirators carried it out sitting across the border.”

However, Mr. Rajnath Singh told Parliament on Wednesday that “the Prime Minister did not directly mention the ISI’s name in the Kanpur train derailment case” and investigation in the three train accidents were yet to be completed by the NIA.

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