28-year-old Indian doctor arrested for alleged Daesh links

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The NIA has found that Rahman allegedly toured Syria and visited an Daesh medical camp in early 2014 for the treatment of the terrorists for 10 days and returned to India.

By PTI

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Published: Wed 19 Aug 2020, 8:57 AM

Last updated: Wed 19 Aug 2020, 11:05 AM

An ophthalmologist from a medical college in Bengaluru has been arrested by the anti-terror National Investigation Agency (NIA) for alleged links to Daesh operatives. Abdur Rahman, 28, was working on a medical app for helping terrorists, investigating officers said on Tuesday.
Abdur Rahman, who worked at the MS Ramaiah Medical College, was arrested on Monday in connection with the Daesh Khorasan Province (ISKP) case being probed by the NIA, they said.
The ISKP case was initially registered by the Delhi Police Special Cell in March after the arrest of a Kashmiri couple - Jahanzaib Sami Wani and his wife Hina Bashir Beigh - from Okhla Vihar, Jamia Nagar in the national capital.
"During interrogation, arrested accused Rahman confessed that he was conspiring with accused Sami and other Syria-based Daesh operatives on secure messaging platforms to further Daesh activities. He was in the process of developing a medical application for helping the injured Daesh cadres in the conflict zones and a weaponry-related application for the benefit of Daesh fighters," NIA spokesperson Sonia Narang said.
The NIA has found that Rahman allegedly toured Syria and visited an Daesh medical camp in early 2014 for the treatment of the terrorists for 10 days and returned to India.

After Rahman's arrest, the NIA carried out searches at three of his premises and seized digital devices, a mobile phone and laptop containing incriminating material, Narang said.
Besides Rahman and the Kashmir couple, the agency had also arrested two Pune residents -- Sadiya Anwar Sheikh and Nabeel Siddick Khatri -- for allegedly being part of the conspiracy to further the activities of Daesh/ISKP in India and to carry out subversive activities in the garb of anti-Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) protests.


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