Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
India

Al Qaeda banking on SIMI to recruit educated Indian youth

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Nov, 2014 11:12 AM
    Al Qaeda, which has announced plans to target India, is keen on recruiting youth trained in computers or aeronautics for its terror designs and is taking the help of banned terror outfit SIMI for this, officials with access to intelligence inputs have revealed.
     
    Sources said intelligence inputs shared by central agencies with the police in some major cities including Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata and Mumbai talked of Al Qaeda not only planning to recruit disgruntled youth but had a target to pick up those familiar with use of computers or having knowledge about aeroplanes.
     
    They said that Al Qaeda, which was responsible for the Sep 11, 2001, attack on New York's World Trade Center but has no reported presence in India till now, is using Indian Mujahideen (IM) operatives in Pakistan to establish contacts with the sleeper cells of SIMI to recruit educated Muslim youth.
     
    "A recruit with some technical skill can prove to be more lethal than others. Al Qaeda wants to add manpower and gain capabilities," an official, who did not want to be named, told IANS.
     
    Sources said that Al Qaeda has plans to cause blasts and other disturbances in India.
     
    Intelligence officials said that members of Al Qaeda were in touch with Riyaz and Iqbal Bhatkal, founder members of Indian Mujahideen who are believed to be in Pakistan.
     
    The sources said there was evidence of growing ties between Al Qaeda and IM.
     
    IM has worked in close association with SIMI in the past and its sleeper cells were sought to be used by Al Qaeda.
     
    SIMI was formed in Aligarh in 1977 and had several thousands of members and offices in almost every district of Madhya Pradesh before it was banned in 2002.
     
    The group is said to believe in fundamentalist Islam and to spread its values. In 2007, the Supreme Court of India described SIMI as a "secessionist movement".
     
    Osama bin Laden's successor Ayman al-Zawahri had in September announced the formation of Al Qaeda's branch for the Indian subcontinent. He had said that it would spread Islamic rule and "raise the flag of jihad" across the subcontinent.
     
    Zawahiri said the wing will defend the "vulnerable in the Indian subcontinent, in Burma, Bangladesh, Assam, Gujarat, Ahmedabad, and Kashmir" from "injustice and oppression."
     
    "Not only in India, security establishments across the world have concerns about the rise of Al Qaeda and its attempts to recruit Muslim youth," another security
    official told IANS.
     
    Sources said that police forces have also been asked to keep a tab on any efforts at the radicalisation of youth.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Pakistani firing worst since 1971 war: BSF

    Pakistani firing worst since 1971 war: BSF
    The Border Security Force (BSF) said Tuesday that it was for the first time after the 1971 war that Pakistani troops were firing at Indian posts on such a massive scale....

    Pakistani firing worst since 1971 war: BSF

    Walk to promote Paralympics in India

    Walk to promote Paralympics in India
    Around a thousand civilians, disabled school children and members of various organisations working for the disabled across India will walk Aug 28...

    Walk to promote Paralympics in India

    Congress, Akalis bag one seat each in Punjab by-poll

    Congress, Akalis bag one seat each in Punjab by-poll
    The ruling Shiromani Akali Dal and the opposition Congress Monday won one seat each in the by-election to two assembly seats in Punjab....

    Congress, Akalis bag one seat each in Punjab by-poll

    AAP loses way, deposit in Punjab

    AAP loses way, deposit in Punjab
    When almost the entire country rejected the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in the parliamentary elections, Punjab went against the tide and gave the new-born party...

    AAP loses way, deposit in Punjab

    Three die in Ludhiana factory fire

    Three die in Ludhiana factory fire
    At least three people were killed Monday in a big fire that broke out at a wool factory in industrial hub Ludhiana's Shivpuri area, police said....

    Three die in Ludhiana factory fire

    Yuvraj's father and former cricketer Yograj Singh arrested

    Yuvraj's father and former cricketer Yograj Singh arrested
    Former test cricketer Yograj Singh was arrested Monday in Panchkula, adjoining Chandigarh, after being involved in an altercation there....

    Yuvraj's father and former cricketer Yograj Singh arrested