Court grants bail to Liyaqat Shah

NEW DELHI, May 17:  Suspected Hizbul militant Liyaqat Shah, arrested by the Delhi Police for allegedly conspiring to carry out terror attacks in the national capital, was today granted bail by a special NIA court here.

District Judge I S Mehta enlarged Liyaqat on bail on a personal bond of Rs 20,000 with a surety of the like amount.

The court imposed several conditions on Liyaqat while granting him bail and directed him not to leave the country without its prior permission.

45-year-old Liyaqat was arrested on March 20 while crossing the Indo-Nepal border in Gorakhpur with his family. Liyaqat had said that he had come to surrender under the Jammu and Kashmir government’s rehabilitation policy.

Delhi Police, which arrested him soon after he had crossed the border, alleged that Liyaqat was involved in the conspiracy to carry out terror attacks in the capital ahead of Holi.

The Home Ministry had on March 28 issued a notification facilitating NIA to take over the case after his arrest had generated conflicting versions from Delhi and J&K Police.

Liyaqat, who has been lodged in Tihar jail, had sought bail saying that he was returning to India via Sunauli border, to surrender but he was arrested by the special cell on March 20.

Liyaqat’s counsel Asim Ali had told the court that his client was accompanied with his wife and children when he was arrested and the probe agency has not been able to establish his links with any crime.

Regarding the alleged recovery of arms and ammunitions from Jama Masjid area here, the counsel had said that it was not recovered at his instance as alleged by the special cell.

He had also said that no substantial evidence has been found against Liyaqat during the investigation till date.

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) had opposed the bail plea, saying he has been booked under the provisions of stringent anti-terror law Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) and for offences under various sections, including waging war against the country, of the IPC.

The NIA had told the court that their investigation in the case was still going on.

Earlier, the court had also allowed NIA’s plea to take DNA samples of Liyaqat.

While Delhi Police had claimed that with Liyaqat’s arrest they had foiled a ‘fidayeen’ (suicide) attack in the national capital ahead of Holi, the J-K Police insisted that he was one of those who had exfiltrated in 1990s and returned to India to surrender under the state’s rehabilitation policy.

The special cell of Delhi Police had earlier said that Liyaqat, a J&K resident, was apprehended from Indo-Nepal border area and had told his interrogators that he is a trained militant of banned terror group Hizbul Mujahideen and was settled in Muzaffarabad in Pakistan Occupied Kashmir(PoK). (AGENCIES)

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