Telenganaencounter': A case of cold-blooded murder of five Muslim youths

[email protected] (Rudabah Simrah)
April 13, 2015

While shifting some Muslim under-trials from one jail to another in the southern state of Telangana, the escorting policemen stopped their van at a secluded place and asked the men to run away.

But the men did not follow the order from the police and refused to get down from the van there because, they said later, in a conspiracy the policemen perhaps wanted to shoot them from the back and pass the incident as the case of a “police shoot-out during an attempted escape” by the prisoners.

Days later, the same group of five under-trial prisoners was found killed inside a bus while they were being shifted to Hyderabad court from a jail in Warangal for hearing in a trial.

encounter 1

Authorities reported that the men attempted to snatch the guns from police when they were shot dead.

“Police had been trying to kill them for some time. They succeeded this time. The police version of the story that they tried to snatch guns from police cannot be true,” Mohammad Ahmed, father of Viqaruddin Ahmed- one of the killed men- said to OnIslam.

“It's clear from the pictures that have appeared in the media that the men were handcuffed and even shackled to their seats…We are 100% sure that police murdered my son and four others in cold-blood.”

“It was a fake encounter”

On Monday, Viqaruddin filed an affidavit to a court in Telangana capital Hyderabad pleading that he be shifted from Warangal district jail to one close to the court because he feared of being killed by police during a long journey.

But the five men- all accused of killing three policemen and arrested between 2007 and 2010- got killed on Tuesday in the morning- a few hours before the Hyderabad court was to decide on Viqaruddin's affidavit.

Three of the killed men- Viqaruddin, Amjed Ali and Mohsammad Zakir were from Hyderabad. Two others, Izhar Khan and Mohammad Haneef were from uttar Pradesh and Gujarat, respectively.

Soon after the five men got killed, Telangana police issued statement saying that on the way to Hyderabad when Viqaruddin returned to bus following a toilet break and he was without handcuffs for a while, when he snatched the gun of a police officer.

telangana“However, the police officer managed to pull off the magazine in the scuffle but the four remaining under-trials pounced on two other policemen nearby and tried to snatch their weapons. The other policemen in the bus retaliated and shot them dead,” the police statement said.

Soon after the killings, pictures and video clips that appeared in the media showed the bodies of five handcuffed men lying in a pool of blood inside the bus. A picture in which Viqaruddin's body lay on a seat, apparently holding a rifle while one of his hands was shackled to the seat by the handcuffs and a chain, went viral in the social media.

“My son was tied to the seat- the picture clearly shows that. It was impossible for him to snatch a police rifle or aim to kill any of them,” Mr Ahmed said.

With the prosecution failing to prove the charges against the five men, they were all in the process to be acquitted in the court soon, Mr Ahmed said.

“Can anyone think to attack police or plan an escape at such a point of the trial? Police killed them in desperation. I am 100% sure that it was a fake encounter,” he said.

Imtiyaz Ali, brother of another victim Amjed Ali, said that he too believed that the police killed the men in a fake encounter.

“Why didn't they allow the trial to complete and let the court decide my brother's fate, if he committed any crime as they charged? Police were not supporting the trial recently as their evidences in support of the charges fell flat in the court,” Ali said to OnIslam.

“Out of frustration they killed the five innocent men.”

Independent Inquiry Demanded

As outcry against the killing of the five apparently handcuffed and unarmed Muslim under-trial prisoners by human rights campaigners and Muslim community leaders across the country peaked, Telangana police insist that the five men indeed sought to attack the policemen and that the policemen opened fire in self defence.

Noting that the case of the killing of five Muslims apparently involved “serious violation of human rights of individuals”, India's National Human Rights Commission has issued notice to the government of Telangana calling for a fact-based report on the killings.

Pointing to a video footage Amnesty International noted that all five men had appeared to be handcuffed when they were shot.

“Impunity for extrajudicial executions is a serious issue in India. Authorities in Telangana need to urgently conduct an independent criminal investigation into the case to determine if it involved extrajudicial executions disguised asencounter' killings,” Abhirr V P, Senior Campaigner at Amnesty International India said in a statement.

Condemning the killings, Muslim community leaders have demanded independent judicial inquiry in the case.

“After police killed the men in cold blood their top brass planted a story which is nothing but a bundle of lies. It seems that some high level police officers planned the killing of the five men to send a message to the Muslim community that their lives are left at the mercy of the police,” Lateef Mohammad Khan, general secretary of Hyderabad-based Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee (CLMC) said to OnIslam.

Zafarul-Islam Khan, president of the All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat, a New Delhi-based umbrella body of Indian Muslims organizations said: “India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his home minister say that the Indian Muslims are immune to terrorism. But the country's security agencies appear to work in tandem to push Muslim youth to terrorism.”

Initial Report: Five undertrials shot dead by police in Telangana

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coastaldigest.com news network
August 8,2020

Mangaluru, Aug 8: As visuals of the Air India Express flight crash at Kozhikode international airport emerge, one cannot help but be reminded of an eerily similar and unfortunate accident that occurred a decade ago. The August 7, 2020 tragedy brought back memories of the 2010 crash.

It was on May 22, 2010 that an Air India Express Boeing 737-800 flight from Dubai to Mangaluru over shot the runway while landing at Bajpe airport and fell into a cliff. Of the 160 passengers and 6 crew members on board, 158 were killed (all crew members and 152 passengers) and only 8 survived.

Even back then, the plane had split into two. The crash has been termed as one of India's worst aviation disasters.

The final conversations between Air traffic control (ATC) and the pilot prior to the landing showed no indication of any distress.

Like the Mangaluru accident, Karipur crash too happened when the flight was attempting to land.

The captain of the aircraft which crashed at Mangaluru, Z Glucia, was an experienced pilot with 10,000 hours of flying experience and had 19 landings at the Mangalore airport. Co-pilot S S Ahluwalia, with 3,000 hours of flying experience had as many as 66 landings at this airport. Both the pilot and co-pilot were among the victims.

An investigation into the accident later found that the cause of the accident was the captain’s failure to discontinue an ‘unstabilised approach’ and his persistence to continue with the landing, despite three calls from the First Officer to ‘go-around’.

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coastaldigest.com news network
April 13,2020

Mangaluru: The Karnataka-Kerala border closure at Talapady amidst nationwide Covid-19 lockdown has not only prevented the movement of vehicles and people from Kasaragod to Mangaluru but also stopped the supply of life-saving drugs from Karnataka’s medical hub to its bordering district.

Hundreds of people from Kasaragod and Kannur districts who were treated in hospitals of Mangaluru for past several years are still dependent on some of the medicines that are available only in Mangaluru. Such medicines have become inaccessible for Keralites following the border closure. Every day, a number of people from Kerala call their acquaintances in Mangaluru to see if there is a way to get medicine.

In fact, Karnataka government has blocked all 23 roads that connect the state with Kerala. The reason given was, Kasaragod is the hotbed of coronavirus and allowing traffic even in emergency cases might lead to spread of Covid-19 in border districts of Dakshina Kannada, Kodagu and Mysuru. The attitude has resulted in the death of around a dozen people in Kasaragod district in last couple of weeks.

Even after the intervention of the Supreme Court a few days ago, the authorities in Karnataka are facing the allegation of being hostile either by blocking the way ahead or turning a deaf ear to the patients reaching their border. 

At this juncture, three Good Samaritans – P K G Anoop Kumar of Canara Engineering College, Mangaluru, Satheesh Shetty of Kasaragod Patla and P Jayaprakash of Ponnangala – have come to the aid of the Malayalee patients who are dependent on medicines from Mangaluru. 

The three activists who are currently staying (in fact stranded amidst lockdown) in Mangaluru, are delivering life-saving medicines to patients in Kerala through Kerala fire servicemen and policemen posted at the Talapady border. 

Anoop Kumar says that took the initiative after a woman, Maria Augustine from Chemberi (Taliparamba) Nellikkutty, contacted him for a medicine. He managed to buy it from a medical store in the port city and handed it over to a Kerala fire serviceman at Talapady border. 

All three are activists of Communist Party of India (Marxist). After moving to Mangaluru, they set up ‘We Donate Charitable Society’ to donate blood. The activists say that they are ready to dispatch medicines from Mangaluru to any person in Kerala. Those Keralites who are in need of medicines from may contact: 888471344 - Anoop, 9895135881 - Jayaprakash

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abdullah
 - 
Sunday, 21 Jun 2020

Salute to you dears.  May God bless you.  HOpe public and Govt will appreciate your sacrifice and support you.

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Abu Muhammad | coastaldigest.com
January 16,2020

Even as the Muslims of undivided Dakshina Kannada district broke out of the “spiral of silence” and made history by leading an unprecedented protest against CAA, NPR and NRC as well as the categorial mistreatment of non-saffronites at the hands of the police across the country, mainstream media turned a blind eye to the spectacle at the Shah Garden Maidan in Mangaluru’s Adyar where about two lakh patriots with tricolor in their hands converged to assert themselves on January 15th, 2020, a date which will be remembered by the people of coastal Karnataka forever.

The largest gathering in the history of Mangaluru was absolutely peaceful, law-abiding and respectful. While the slogans of ‘Azaadi’ were reverberating in the atmosphere, the protesters were seen making way for vehicles and passersby, taking care of women and helping elderly citizens on the highway adjacent to the ground. Though the organisers and most of the participants were Muslims, they collectively identified themselves as “We, the people of India”.

The district administration and the police department hadn’t imagined or even dreamt of such a mammoth gathering after blocking the highway and banning public transport from 9 am to 9 pm. Many opine that this action was taken only to discourage the concerned from participating in the protest and to create fear in the hearts of the people who are yet to process the unjustifiable deaths of two innocent citizens in an unwarranted police firing a few weeks ago.

What has since surprised the protesters most is the mainstream media’s blatant attempt to downplay the significance of this largest ever gathering. Shockingly, it could not make it to the front pages of any of the state-level Kannada daily newspapers except city-based Vaartha Bharathi. In the absence of The Hindu, which had announced a holiday on account of Makar Sankranti, most of the English newspapers too pitilessly buried the historic event in their inner pagers. National TV channels too were evidently reluctant to cover the event until NDTV started telecasting the news of the protest.

This uneasy relationship between the media and minorities in coastal Karnataka has long existed, but the non-coverage of the huge protest of Jan 15 marks a quantum leap beyond the media’s traditional pro-Sangh Parivar stance and biases –– which in the past had often demonised non-saffronites –– to now completely ignore and suppress the people’s voice. This media bias has naturally evoked a sharp response from netizens, who took to social media to issue clarion calls to boycott the mainstream media forever.

Cleanliness Drive

Most major protest meets and rallies –– both religious and political –– leave behind tonnes of garbage, especially water bottles, placards and buntings. However, the organisers of the Jan 15 protest meet led by example by launching a cleanliness drive in the area soon after the protesters left the venue peacefully. The drive continued on Jan 16 too. (Ironically, amidst this ongoing cleanliness drive, a local news portal captured photos of a few plastic bottles scattered along the road at Adyar and published a report accusing the event organisers and participants of polluting the area!)

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