Abdul Subhan Qureshi’s journey from being a quiet boy to ‘bin Laden of India’
Abdul Subhan Qureshi’s journey as a terrorist began in 2001
when he left a reputed computer firm to pursue religious activities and went on
to edit Islamic Voice – the mouthpiece of the banned Student Islamic Movement
of India (SIMI).
Qureshi alias Tauqeer, suspected of being
involved in the serial blasts in Gujarat and Delhi in 2008, was arrested by
Delhi Police after a gunfight on Saturday night following a tip-off. He figured
in the National Investigation Agency’s (NIA) most-wanted list.
Investigators looking for details about the alleged top
bomb-maker of the Indian Mujahideen had little clue about who indoctrinated
Qureshi, a quiet boy in school who was labelled as the Osama bin Laden of
India.
Qureshi had become a staunch SIMI activist by 1998 and,
sources in the police said, also attended its conference in 1999 at Aligarh,
which was addressed by the founder and spiritual leader of Palestine’s Hamas
Sheikh Ahmed Yasin.
READ MORE: 2008 Ahmedabad blast accused among two terror
suspects arrested from Gaya.
Many believe that Qureshi was indoctrinated by Sadiq Israr,
the arrested co-founder of Indian Mujahideen and a resident of Cheetah camp in
Mumbai, along with Salim Mujahid Islahi from Hyderabad.
Islahi was shot dead in 2004 when a team of Gujarat police
officials opened fire to disperse a mob that tried to prevent the arrest of
Maulana Naseeruddin, an accused in the murder of former Gujarat minister Haren
Pandya.
An officer of Delhi Police’s special cell said Qureshi held
the top rank in SIMI after the arrest of its general secretary Safdar Nagori from
Madhya Pradesh’s Indore in March 2008.
The 45-year-old’s name cropped up for the first time in the
list of wanted terrorists when Indian Mujahideen operatives sent out emails
claiming responsibility for the blasts in Uttar Pradesh, Jaipur, Ahmedabad and
Delhi between 2007 and 2008.
Counter-terrorism agencies of various states believed that
the emails sent by Qureshi, who had been travelling across the country meeting
and indoctrinating youth, and plotting blasts across the country.
But arrests of Indian Mujahideen cadre by the Mumbai
Police’s crime branch in September 2008 revealed that the emails sent by
Mohammed Asghar Peerbhoy, a Pune-based engineer who worked for Yahoo.
It gave enough time for Qureshi, an alleged co-founder of
terrorist outfit Indian Mujahideen (IM), to slip under the radar and disappear.
Qureshi’s presence in Nepal was established much later after his close
associate Haseeb Raza was arrested by Gujarat police in 2010.
READ MORE: 2008 Ahmedabad serial blasts accused nabbed
from Karnataka.
But the Intelligence Bureau mobilised its sleuths to nab
Qureshi only in 2011. Qureshi, who had been alerted about Haseeb’s arrest, left
the hideout known to Haseeb and the sleuths returned empty-handed.
“Raza knew the precise details because he had stayed with
Qureshi in Nepal,” a senior Gujarat police officer, requesting anonymity, said.
Since then little was heard of Qureshi, who did not get in
touch even with his mother. She now lives on Mumbai’s Mira Road.
Qureshi told the police during initial interrogation that he
fled to Nepal through the border in Bihar in 2008, soon after his name surfaced
in the July 2008 Ahmedabad serial bombings probe.
Qureshi worked as a school teacher and again came in touch
with Riyaz Bhatkal, founder member of IM, in Nepal where he lived until early
2015. He even managed to procure a Nepalese voter’s ID card and passport, said
police.
“In February-March 2015, on Bhatkal’s instructions he went
to Saudi Arabia to arrange finances needed for the revival of the weak and
scattered network of Indian Mujahideen in India,” Pramod Singh Kushwah, deputy
commissioner of police (special cell), said.
“After returning from Saudi Arabia in June 2017, Qureshi
began visiting India clandestinely to indoctrinate unemployed youth among the
community and fill the space left void by the fall of the top IM leaders,”
Kushwah added.
As investigators are trying to piece together information
about the Mumbai man, a Maharashtra Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) officer said his
six brothers and sisters are well-educated and not inclined to anti-national
activities.
Qureshi’s journey into terrorism has stunned his teachers at
Antonio De Souza High School in Byculla. A teacher requesting anonymity said
that he was not the kind of student who would score a 90% in mathematics or any
subject but he would do better than many others in his class.
Qureshi scored 76.6% in his secondary school examination in
1988 and obtained a diploma in industrial electronics from Bharatiya Vidyapeeth
at Kharghar in 1995. He also did a Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer (MCSE)
course from CMS Institute in Marol and worked for Datamatics.
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