IE Highlights

Search
Indian Express
Web
Advanced Search
Search Archives

Advertisments

Matrimonials Register FREE on Naukri.com. Airtel Call Home Rs.250 cashback for credit cards* Yatra Offers- 10% cash back on Master Card

Send Gifts & Flowers

Live Cricket

Nation

SC rejects bail plea of terrorist who planned to kill Modi

Agencies

Posted online: Friday, April 25, 2008 at 1723 hrs Print Email


New Delhi, April 25:: The Supreme Court on Friday dismissed the bail application of POTA convict Farhan Ahmed Mustak who was charged by the police of planning to assassinate Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi and several other functionaries of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP).

“You (Farhan) have already been convicted. There is no merit in the plea,” a bench of Justices Arijit Pasayat and P Sathasivam observed, while dismissing the convict’s plea.

The apex court rejected Farhan’s claim that he has been falsely implicated by police.

Farhan Ahmed, who was sentenced to seven-year jail term by a Delhi POTA court, is facing trial in Gujarat for his alleged role in planning to assassinate Modi and VHP leaders like Pravin Togadia and others, to avenge the post-Godhra communal violence in the state.

According to the Gujarat police, Farhan was involved in the kidnapping of orphans from relief camps set up after the Godhra carnage in the state and training them in “jehadi” camps at Moradabad in UP for assassinating Modi and other leaders.

He was booked under IPC sections 120 B (criminal conspiracy), 121 (waging war against the country), 121 (conspiracy) and 123 (concealing evidence with intent to facilitate design to wage war).

Ads By Google

Post CommentView CommentsWrite to Editor

All Headlines All Front Page News
Your comment[s] on this article


Be the first to comment on this story.

Total comment[s]:0 | Read comment[s]| Post your comment

Most Read Articles

Pact reached over Amarnath land, Jammu agitation finally suspended‘I can’t wait, will go and get grandchildren on my shoulders’PM steps in, panel ready with report to help foreign students‘We are not against industry... but industry should not mean one person’‘If we want world-class institutions, we can’t have reservations for faculty’