Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
International

Chhota Rajan Brought To Delhi, CBI Takes Custody

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Nov, 2015 11:40 AM
    Long-absconding underworld don Rajendra Sadashiv Nikalje alias Chhota Rajan was brought to the national capital from Indonesia on Friday morning as Maharashtra government's decision to hand all of his cases to the CBI assumed political overtones.
     
    The fugitive don - arrested by Indonesian police on October 25 - arrived at the Delhi's Indira Gandhi International Airport at 5.30 a.m. in a special aircraft, accompanied by officers of the Central Bureau of Investigation, Mumbai and Delhi Police. He was taken straight to the CBI headquarters here under tight security.
     
    Security at the CBI headquarters, where Rajan has been lodged, has been beefed up with deployment of more Central Industrial Security Force personnel. The traffic on roads near the CBI office here has been restricted.
     
    In Maharashtra, Congress and Nationalist Congress Party slammed the BJP-Shiv Sena government's decision to hand over around 75 cases relating to Rajan to the CBI. However, the central government said handling of all cases by one agency was helpful.
     
    Sources said Delhi Police was likely to hand over its seven cases pertaining to Rajan to the CBI.
     
    Rajan is wanted in over 85 crimes, ranging from murder, extortion, smuggling and drug trafficking. Apart from Maharashtra, he has cases against him in Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and with the CBI.
     
    Rajan, 55, who fled India in 1988 for Dubai, reached Delhi from Bali after a delay of a few days as flights could not take off from the Indonesian island due to cyclonic storms.
     
    Sources said Rajan is yet to be presented before a special CBI magistrate, who will take a decision on his custody.
     
    "Rajendra Sadashiv Nikhalje alias Chhota Rajan alias Mohan Kumar has been successfully brought back to India on deportation from Indonesia today (Friday) morning. He is in custody of CBI-Interpol. Legal formalities are in process," the CBI said in a statement.
     
    Officials said Rajan is considered a "friendly don" because of his earlier tip-offs to Indian security agencies about the movement of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim and his aides.
     
     
    Mumbai Congress chief Sanjay Nirupam slammed the Maharashtra government's decision to hand over cases pertaining to Rajan to the CBI.
     
    "If the CBI will handle all the cases, what will Mumbai police do," Nirupam asked and urged the state government to reconsider its decision.
     
    NCP state spokesperson Nawab Malik said Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and Mumbai Police Commissioner Ahmad Javed had assured that the mafia don would be brought to Mumbai.
     
    "Why has he now been taken to New Delhi? What is their strategy? All major cases, including journalist Jyotirmoy Dey's killing and Pakmodia Street firing, shall be handled by the CBI. Do they doubt our police's capabilities? It is demoralising the Mumbai Police," Malik said.
     
    Former Maharashtra director general of police D. Shivanandan also criticised the move to hand over Rajan cases to the CBI and reiterated that the Mumbai police were among the best in the world to investigate any such case.
     
    On the other hand, union Minister of State for Home affairs Kiren Rijiju said: "One agency handling the issue will always help the case."
     
    "I think we should not discuss much about the procedure because he's already here," he added.
     
    Rajan, once a close aide of Dawood Ibrahim, parted ways with the latter before the conspiracy for the 1993 Mumbai blasts was hatched. There was an attempt on Rajan's life in 2000 when Dawood's men tracked him to a hotel in Bangkok but he managed a dramatic escape by jumping from the first floor of the hotel.
     
    Mumbai Police has nearly 75 cases registered against Rajan, including 20 of murder, four cases under Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act, one under Prevention of Terrorism Act and over 20 cases under the stringent Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act.
     
     
    Maharashtra additional chief secretary K.P. Bakshi on Thursday announced it had handed over all its cases against Rajan to the CBI.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Sikh Cop, Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, Makes History In Texas, To Be First To Wear Turban

    Sikh Cop, Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, Makes History In Texas, To Be First To Wear Turban
    In one of the biggest goodwill gestures to one of the largest communities in the US -- the Sikhs -- the state of Texas has allowed on-duty Sikh officers to sport essential Sikh religious symbols like beards and turbans.

    Sikh Cop, Sandeep Singh Dhaliwal, Makes History In Texas, To Be First To Wear Turban

    Hindus In Malaysia Slam Cleric's Views On Garlanding PM Najib Razak

    Hindus In Malaysia Slam Cleric's Views On Garlanding PM Najib Razak
    Ethnic Indian Hindus in Malaysia have strongly criticised a Muslim cleric's suggestions that Prime Minister Najib Razak should not have donned a "Hindu" attire, nor should he have been garlanded at a "Hindu" ceremony, media reported Saturday.

    Hindus In Malaysia Slam Cleric's Views On Garlanding PM Najib Razak

    Parents Of Islamic States's American Hostage Hope She Is Alive

    Parents Of Islamic States's American Hostage Hope She Is Alive
    The parents of the female US aid worker kidnapped by the Islamic State (IS) refused to believe that she has been killed in Jordanian airstrikes as claimed by her captors, media reported Saturday.

    Parents Of Islamic States's American Hostage Hope She Is Alive

    'Pakistan No Place For Women'

    'Pakistan No Place For Women'
    Even Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai and social activist Mukhtaran Mai are not being honoured in Pakistan as women still remained the most backward in the country, a leading daily said Saturday.

    'Pakistan No Place For Women'

    After Obama's Shots, NYT Asks Modi To Break His 'Dangerous Silence'

    After Obama's Shots, NYT Asks Modi To Break His 'Dangerous Silence'
    As President Barack Obama's comments that religious intolerance in India would have shocked Mahatma Gandhi raised a storm in India, the New York Times asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to break his "deafening silence."

    After Obama's Shots, NYT Asks Modi To Break His 'Dangerous Silence'

    India Affirms Commitment To Rights Of Girl Child

    India Affirms Commitment To Rights Of Girl Child
    Vowing to create a "world fit for children", India has reaffirmed its focus on the development of the girl child, ensuring her education and fighting to end discrimination.

    India Affirms Commitment To Rights Of Girl Child