8 Aug 2008, 0340 hrs IST,
Although the government has identified four of these fronts which are working at an all-India level for SIMI, the home ministry has failed to put them in the list of banned organisations. The four fronts are Tahreek-e-Ehyaa-e-Ummat (TEU), Tehreek-Talaba-e-Arabia (TTA), Tehrik Tahaffuz-e-Sha’aire Islam (TTSI) and Wahadat-e-Islami.
None of these fronts, however, finds place in the official list of banned outfits carrying 34 names — updation of which was last made by the home ministry in May.
But these are not the only four outfits which have been working for SIMI in the country. There are as many as 46 other organisations in eight states which “are being used for carrying out its (SIMI) activities including collection of funds, circulation of literature and regrouping of cadres”.
Twenty-three out of these 46 outfits are active in Kerala followed by eight in Maharashtra, seven in West Bengal, three in Bihar, two in Uttar Pradesh and one each in Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and
“State police and intelligence agencies have, however, been keeping close tabs on these outfits. But one has to have concrete evidence to ban them under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967”, said a senior home ministry official.
The identity of these outfits were disclosed by the home ministry in its background note submitted before the Special Tribunal headed by Delhi High Court judge Gita Mittal who did not uphold the notification of the goverment extending the ban on SIMI on Tuesday. These details were also submitted to the Supreme Court the next day when the home ministry successfully challenged the tribunal’s order and got a stay.
The background note has also given details of different activities of SIMI — fund raising, instigating Muslims for riots and circulation of provocative CDs/cassettes. It mentioned how the outfit’s activists have been travelling far and wide to collect funds besides getting huge funds from well-wishers in Arab countries.
The ban has, however, not deterred its members to stop recruiting and strengthening its cadre. Currently, a number of educated persons including technocrats, chartered accountants and doctors are associated with the activities of SIMI clandestinely.
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com
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SIMI, the first among terror suspects
7 Aug 2008, 0900 hrs IST,TNN
Every time a bomb goes off in some part of the country, the needle of suspicion invariably turns to Students Islamic Movement of India, with the police making tall claims about the Muslim outfit’s terror network and its links with
In the past couple of years, as the number of people falling to deadly bombs rose sharply across the country, the crackdown on SIMI intensified as well, even as the group claimed that it had nothing to do with the attacks. On Tuesday, as a Delhi High Court Tribunal gave a clean chit to the Islamic group, it seemed that the allegations against SIMI may not be true. But a hard look at the banned group by TOI reporters reveals that the tribunal’s decision notwithstanding, SIMI fingerprints have cropped up in terror attacks countrywide.
As
In neighbouring Karnataka, the police have busted a network of SIMI activists and seized explosives from them. The arrested persons have been accused of having links with terror outfits and planning strikes in the state. Most of the arrested SIMI activists are well-educated. Though none of the terror attacks in the state has been attributed to SIMI so far, the arrested activists have been accused of providing logistics support for the attacks on vital places. In fact, to test the explosives, they had carried out trial blasts near a village in
They had also organised a training camp in the jungles near Hubli.
Though the outfit has an underground network spread across the country, SIMI has become very strong in central
Similar is the story in other states like UP,
But, despite the crackdown on its cadre and a watch on its activities, SIMI has managed to survive and carry on its activities. In Kerala, SIMI has managed to survive under the cover of a slew of Islamic outfits. Intelligence agencies suspect that some of its operatives may have found way into mainstream political parties as well.
The intelligence agencies may be convinced about SIMI’s role in the terror network, but most of activists cooling their heels in jails face cases related to distributing fundamentalist literature. Due to the lack of concrete evidences against the activists, the cases have been moving slowly. For the government, which has been talking of crushing the terror network, it is a cause of concern.
Guilty By Association?
How It Began?
Mohammad Ahmadullah Siddiqi, now a professor of mass communication at Western Illinois University in the US, founded the Students Islamic Movement of India (SIMI) at Aligarh in April 1977, with a mission to ‘liberate India’ from western cultural influence and convert it into an Islamic society
What Is Its Ideology?
Influenced by the Deoband school of thought, SIMI aims to counter in
How It Became Controversial?
SIMI originally emerged as a student wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami. But the alliance was shortlived as Jamat disapproved of SIMI’s extremist line.
SIMI was banned first on September 27, 2001, under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act 1967. In July 2006, the Centre told the Unlawful Activities
(Prevention) Tribunal that contrary to notion that SIMI’s activities had declined following its ban, the organization had stepped up its subversive activities and was involved in almost all major explosions, communal violence and circulation of inflammatory material across the country
TRYST WITH TERROR TAG
May 14, 2003
Mumbai Police arrest three people and foil an alleged SIMI-LeT plan to trigger blasts in Mumbai and Kerala
May 26, 2003
Police arrest two SIMI activists in the Ghatkopar bomb blast case in Mumbai
Jul 21, 2003
A POTA court in
Sep 12, 2003
Police arrest two SIMI activists for removing railway sleeper clips in
Nov 11, 2003
A
Nov 1, 2004
Police arrest an alleged SIMI activist, Maulana Nasiruddin, at
Jun 11, 2005
POTA court acquits eight alleged SIMI activists accused in the Ghatkopar blast case
Jul 11, 2005
Police arrest six alleged SIMI activists, including four of a family, at Faizabad, UP, in connection with an attack on the Babri Masjid complex in Ayodhya
Jul 1, 2006
UP government withdraws a treason case against SIMI president Shahid Badr Falahi
Jul 6, 2006
Supreme Court rejects a SIMI plea seeking revocation of a ban on it
Jul 13, 2006
Police arrest around 200 SIMI activists in Mumbai after the deadly train bombings on 7/11
Jul 21, 2006
Police arrest three alleged SIMI activists in connection with 7/11 Mumbai blasts
Oct 30, 2006
Police arrest Noor-ul-Hooda, a SIMI activist, for his alleged involvement in
Feb 15, 2007
Supreme Court describes SIMI as a secessionist movement
Mar 27, 2008
Madhya Pradesh STF arrests SIMI chief Safdar Nagori along with 11 other alleged activists at
Aug 5, 2008
A Selhi High Court Tribunal lifts ban on SIMI
Aug 6, 2008
Supreme Court stays ban on SIMI
(With inputs from Mumbai,
Source: The Times of India, New Delhi
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-terrorism-jihad/simi,-first-among-terror-suspects,/d/475