The Tamil Nadu Police on Sunday handed over the Coimbatore cylinder car blast case documents to the NIA.
Expressing his dissatisfaction over the alleged state government’s delay in handing over the Coimbatore blast case to the National Investigation Agency (NIA), Tamil Nadu Governor RN Ravi on Friday said there should be “no politics” on terrorism. Governor Ravi also expressed serious concern over the possible destruction of crucial evidence in a “high-profile terror plot,” said Raj Bhavan.
The Governor praised the police, who established the car blast as a serious terror attack conspiracy within hours of the incident and lamented soft peddling by the state government. He urged “no politics on terrorism and no leniency to terrorists as they are enemies of the nation and friends of none,” added Raj Bhavan.
Meanwhile, AIADMK leader and former Tamil Nadu Minister R.B. Udaya Kumar lambasted the DMK government over the law and order situation. He said Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin should tell people what measures he had taken to prevent terrorist activities in the state.
The NIA registered the case after the Counter Terrorism and Counter Radicalisation (CTCR) division of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) issued an order asking the anti-terror agency to start a probe into the case.
The MHA order comes a day after Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin recommended an NIA probe into the case. In a recommendation letter to the MHA, Stalin requested on Wednesday to transfer the investigation of the case related to the car cylinder explosion in the Ukkadam area of Coimbatore to the NIA and directed police to ensure security in Coimbatore.
Tamil Nadu Police so far have arrested six people in connection with the case and have invoked the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA). Those arrested are learned to be associates of Jameesha Mubin, who was charred to death in suspicious circumstances after an LPG cylinder inside a Maruti 800 he was driving exploded near a temple around 4 a.m.
According to police, Mubin, 25, who was an engineering graduate, has been previously questioned by the NIA in 2019 for alleged terror links. His name is mentioned as the primary accused in the case.
Five people arrested on Monday night were Mohammad Thalka, 25, Mohammad Asarudheen, 25, Muhammad Riyaz, 27, Feroz Ismail, 27, and Mohammad Navaz Ismail, 27. However, the sixth person, identified as Afsar Khan, a relative of the deceased, was arrested earlier on Thursday.
Khan is the cousin of the deceased. He was picked up two days ago by the special investigation team.
On Wednesday, police officials also conducted searches on Khan’s residence and took his laptop.