Arrested ISIS 'recruit' Arif Majeed sent to NIA custody till December 8

Police said 23-year old Arif appeared ‘highly radicalized’

Update: 2014-11-29 13:53 GMT
Post refers to 'Shaheed Arif Majeed (Abu Ali al-Hindi)' (Photo: video grab)

Mumbai: Arrested ISIS 'recruit' Arif Majeed was on Saturday sent to NIA custody till December 8, observing that his custodial interrogation was necessary.

The NIA told the court that they want to unearth the entire conspiracy from Majeed's 'recruitment' to the role played by him in the 'war' (for an Islamic state).

The agency also told special NIA judge P R Deshmukh that three other youths, who had joined the UN banned terror outfit, along with Majeed are shown as wanted in the case.

"We also want to investigate the kind of training that Majeed was imparted before joining the ISIS forces," NIA's prosecutor told the court.

In the court, when asked by the judge, Majeed told his name and replied in the negative when asked whether he had any complainants against the NIA.

23-year old Majeed from Kalyan, in the outskirts of Mumbai, who until now was believed to have been killed while fighting for militant group ISIS in Syria, was arrested on Friday night hours after he landed in Mumbai.

Majeed, who was grilled central security agencies alongwith NIA before he was taken into custody, was produced before a designated NIA court on Saturday.

A case has been slapped against ISIS and its operatives under Sec 125 of the IPC, which deals with waging war against any Asiatic country, which has friendly ties with India, entailing maximum punishment of life imprisonment.

A notification was issued by the Union home ministry on late Friday directing NIA to register the case.

Arif appeared "highly radicalized" and is likely to face action, police said.

In May this year, four youths from Kalyan — Shaheen Tanki, Fahad Shaikh and Aman Tandel, besides Arif — had left India to visit holy places in the West Asia, but they disappeared thereafter and since then were suspected to have joined the Sunni extremist group.

Soon after his return, Arif was made to undergo a medical examination, according to a source.

His family friend Iftekhar Khan said, "Arif's father Ejaz received a phone call from security agencies this morning saying his son is in Mumbai."

According to police, the four engineering students flew to Baghdad on May 23 as part of a group of 22 pilgrims to visit religious shrines in Iraq.

The next day, Arif had called his family from Baghdad and apologised for having left without informing them. Upon returning to India, other pilgrims had told police that Arif, Fahad, Aman and Shaheen had hired a taxi to Fallujah, a city west of Baghdad which had emerged as the epicentre of Iraq's deadly insurgency.

"On August 26, Shaheen Tanki called up Arif's family and told them that their son had become a 'martyr' claiming that the latter died fighting for ISIS in Syria," a family friend Ateek Khan had told reporters.

Accordingly the next day, Arif's family performed 'janaza-e-gayabana' (prayers for the departed soul in absence of the body) in Kalyan.

Recently, Arif's father Ejaz Majeed had reportedly met the NIA and told them his son had fled from the IS-controlled areas to Turkey after fighting for the militant group for nearly three months and wants to return to India.

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