Perumbavoor rape case: Bengali friend helped cops nab culprit

Local resident helped police recover the weapon used by the accused for the crime

Update: 2016-06-18 01:11 GMT
Cops take Ameerul Islam, the migrant labourer, arrested in the Jisha murder case, from a covered police van to the court by making him wear a helmet so as to hide his face. The identification parade of the Assamese youth is yet to be done forcing police to do the covering act'. (Photo: DC)

Kochi: The police who nabbed Ameerul Islam, 23, accused in the Jisha murder case, were helped by his Bengali friend, Jinjal, in identifying him while he  was working at a company in Kancheepuram in Tamil Nadu. Jinjal was among those questioned by the cops about the migrant labourers gone missing from the region post the  murder of Jisha on April 28.

“Among a few others, he told us the case of Ameerul. However, by that time, the accused’s mobile phone was switched off. Our  team even went to his house in Dholda Gramam of Assam and learned that he had left there after a seven-day stay,” sources said.

Ameerul, who reached Kancheepuram early this month, got a temporary job at an electronics company on June 9. He inserted a new SIM in his old mobile phone and the cyber cell soon tracked him to the Tamil Nadu border town. However, the cops did not have his photo or any other means to identify him.

A four-member police team took Jinjal along with them to Kancheepuram and began to search for Ameerul. Their attempts bore no fruit for the first three days but Jinjal identified his friend from a group of workers coming out of the factory after their evening shift on June 13. Though Ameerul resisted , the cops  overpowered him and took him into custody.

Meanwhile, it was a local native who helped the cops in recovering the weapon used by the accused for the crime.  They were alerted by Arun Prashob, DYFI Perumbavur block secretary.

“When the election results came on May 19, we celebrated atop a building next to the lodge where the cops said Ameerul was staying for the last five months. Then I saw a knife at the balcony veranda of the adjacent three-storey lodge but didn’t realise its  importance. After the news broke out of his arrest and other details, it struck  me the knife must be that weapon and immediately alerted the police,” he said. Lodge owner Kadappadam George said he was not aware of Ameerul staying there and that he had originally extended rental accommodation to 19 Bengalis.

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