Kolkata youth held for terror mail to Delhi CM

January 25, 2013

EmailGurgaon/Kolkata, Jan 25: Haryana Police arrested a 27-year-old youth from Behala on Tuesday for allegedly sending a threat mail to a five-star hotel chain in Delhi and IT city Gurgaon in the name of terror outfit Indian Mujahideen.

Copies of the terror mail were also marked to the offices of Delhi chief minister Sheila Dixit and police commissioner Neeraj Kumar.

Before moving in for the arrest, the cyber cell of the Gurgaon police had seized a computer hard disk from a cyber cafe on Roy Bahadur Road in Behala that was allegedly used to send the mails.

Sources in Gurgaon police said that the suspect - Nilesh Bhattacharya - has a "disturbed past" and may have been seeking attention.

Nilesh was picked up from his home around 10pm on Tuesday and taken to Gurgaon. Sources said he is unemployed and passed the Class XII exams through open school. "His father died a couple of years ago. His brother, too, had an unnatural death with the accused claiming that he had committed suicide. Nilesh claims that his mother is undergoing some treatment. We are investigating his claims and trying to ascertain if he is mentally challenged," said Gurgaon police DCP Maheshwar Dayal.

The e-mail, claiming to be from Indian Mujahideen, had threatened terror strikes on the lines of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks. It was sent from the ID - [email protected] on January 20. "Mumbai ke bad ab dilli ki bari, hotel *** . New Dilli ka koi astitva nahi rahne denge. gola barood to tumhare yahan pahunch chuka hai (After Mumbai, it's turn of Delhi. Delhi will be reduced to ashes. Explosives have already been sent). Mohmmad Abdul Aaka alias Nilanjan Bhattacharya," said the mail.

It seemed that the threat was addressed to the Delhi chief minister, police commissioner and hotels, said Gurgaon police commissioner K K Sindhu. "It was forwarded only to the security officer, who is currently working with Leela Kempinski at the Ambience Mall in Gurgaon," he said.

The Special Cell of Delhi police said they were also investigating the case since the same e-mail was forwarded to the Delhi chief minister's Sheila Dikshit's office just ahead of the Republic Day celebrations.

Talking to TOI, S N Srivastava, special CP (Special Cell), said they had difficulties in tracking the accused as there was no CCTV footage that could be recovered from the cyber cafe. Gurgaon police, though, said the accused had attached his photo with the email making their job easier to identify the accused.

"The team had visited a cyber cafe in Behala and took the IP address from where the email was sent. The computer hard disk was also seized," said joint commissioner of police (crime) Pallab Kanti Ghosh.

The ID used to send the alleged Indian Mujahideen mail was created on January 20, the same day it was sent from the cyber cafe. According to a senior police officer, two other persons are also under scanner and the cafe owner too is being questioned.

"The three suspects regularly visited the cyber cafe. Their entries in the log book, along with ID cards, were also recovered. One of the three IDs deposited could be fake. We are on job and the accused will be arrested soon," a member of the police team said.

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News Network
February 29,2020

Kochi, Feb 29: When Major Abdul Rahim, a soldier in the Afghan army, died in a bomb blast in Kabul on February 19, a tear was shed for him in far away Ernakulam district of Kerala.

The major had received a transplant of hands from Eloor native T G Joseph back in 2015, and the latter’s family had grown attached to the Afghan soldier.

Maj. Abdul Rahim, a bomb disposal expert, had lost his hands in an explosion in 2012. For three years thereafter, he struggled with his handicap. Then, when 54-year-old Joseph passed away in a road accident, it was decided to give his hands to the Afghan major.

The transplant procedure was successfully performed by a team of doctors led by Dr. Subrahmania Iyer at the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences in Kochi.

After the transplant and an intensive spell of physiotherapy, Abdul Rahim could regain a considerable part of his hands’ functions. He rejoined the army and returned to defuse bombs in his war-torn country.

In gratitude, Major Abdul Rahim would visit Kochi every year to meet Joseph’s family. 

“We were shocked to hear of the demise of Major Abdul Rahim. Though Joseph left us, a part of him lived on. Abdul Rahim was a living memorial for us. Whenever he came to the Amrita institute for a consultation, we used to visit him,” Joseph’s wife was quoted as saying by Mathrubhoomi daily.

Major Abdul Rahim struck up a good friendship with his predecessor, in a way of speaking: the first person to have had a successful hand transplant at the Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences. T R Manu became a close friend of the Afghan solider and kept regularly in touch.

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News Network
May 9,2020

New Delhi, May 9: With 3,320 coronavirus cases and 95 deaths reported in the last 24 hours, India's COVID-19 cases rose to 59,662 on Saturday, informed the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare.

The total number of active cases in the country now stands at 39,834 while the number of cured/discharged/migrated stands at 17,847.

The country has reported 1,981 deaths so far, added the Ministry.

Maharashtra has the highest number of cases with 19, 063 followed by Gujarat with 7,402 cases and Delhi with 6,318 cases.

Meanwhile, the country continues to remain in a lockdown slated to end on May 17.

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News Network
June 17,2020

New Delhi, 17: Tensions on the Indo-China border have spiked to the highest since 1962 after over 20 troops, including an Indian commanding officer, were killed in the face-off in Galwan valley that has seen a six-week long standoff underway with the Peoples Liberation Army.

The Army said that the soldiers – including the Commanding Officer of 16 Bihar regiment in charge of the area – died while a `de-escalation process’ was underway. Sources said that this death toll could rise up as some soldiers are currently not accounted for after PLA troops attacked with spiked sticks and stones in the Galwan valley.

Chinese side also has casualties but the number is still not known. The Indian death toll is perhaps the worst single day loss in decades and has come at a time when thousands of troops are forward deployed in Eastern Ladakh.

ET was the first to report on May 12 about a massive troop build up in the Galwan valley, which is an old flashpoint that had seen action in the 1962 war as well.

There have been reports of casualties on the Chinese side in the clash but numbers are currently not available. Worryingly, information from the ground suggests that several Indian soldiers, including four officers, are missing and could have been taken captive by a vastly larger Chinese force. Their status is still not known.

“During the de-escalation process underway in the Galwan Valley, a violent face-off took place yesterday night with casualties. The loss of lives on the Indian side includes an officer and two soldiers. Senior military officials of the two sides are currently meeting at the venue to defuse the situation,” an Indian Army statement reads.

The Ministry of External Affairs said that the clash occurred when the Chinese side violated the LAC. “On the late-evening and night of 15th June, 2020 a violent face-off happened as a result of an attempt by the Chinese side to unilaterally change the status quo there. Both sides suffered casualties that could have been avoided had the agreement at the higher level been scrupulously followed by the Chinese side,” a statement reads.

The loss of the Commanding Officer is especially devastating and he had been directly involved in de-escalation talks with the Chinese side, including one hours before the clash took place. Sources said that the talks on Monday morning had led to an agreement for Chinese forces to withdraw from Indian territory as part of the disengagement.

According to one version, the CO had gone to the standoff point with a party of 50 men to check if the Chinese had retreated as promised. As the Indian side proceeded to demolish and burn illegal Chinese structures on its side of the LAC, including an observation post constructed on the South bank of the river, a fresh stand off took place as a large force of Chinese troops returned back.

Sources said that a Chinese force in excess of 250 quickly assembled near Patrol Point 14 and were physically stopped by Indian soldiers from entering Indian territory. Soldiers from both sides did not use firearms but the Chinese soldiers carried spiked sticks to attack.

Given the terrain of the region, a part of the standoff and clash took place in the middle of the Galwan river that is currently flowing at full spate, leading to high casualties as injured soldiers got swept away. Indian soldiers have to cross the Galwan river at atleast five points to reach PP 14, which marks the LAC.

Chinese media reports on Tuesday quoted the spokesperson from its Western Theatre Command as laying claim over the Galwan valley region and blaming the Indian side for the clash. Reports quoted Col Zhang Shuili as saying that India has violated the consensus made during Army commander level talks.

As reported, Galwan river area has a painful history with China, with Peoples Liberation Army (PLA) soldiers surrounding a freshly set up Indian Army post in July 1962, in what would be one of the early triggers to the Sino-Indian war. At an Army post that was overrun at Galwan, 33 Indian soldiers were killed and several dozen taken captive in 1962.

In the past, the Doklam crisis in 2017 saw tensions building up along the Pangong Tso lake as well with soldiers engaging in a fight with sticks and stones. However, the Eastern Ladakh standoff is of a much more serious nature, with over 6000 Chinese troops lined up with tanks and artillery, faced off with a larger Indian forces. Troop build up has also been reported across the borders in Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim and Arunachal.

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