Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
proflie-avatar
Login
exit_to_app
DEEP READ
Schools breeding hatred
access_time 14 Sep 2023 10:37 AM GMT
Ukraine
access_time 16 Aug 2023 5:46 AM GMT
May that spark not be extinguished
access_time 2 Dec 2023 8:55 AM GMT
A Constitution always in the making
access_time 27 Nov 2023 11:43 AM GMT
Debunking myth of Israel’s existence
access_time 23 Oct 2023 7:01 AM GMT
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightIndiachevron_rightIshrat Jahan was LeT...

Ishrat Jahan was LeT operative: David Headley

text_fields
bookmark_border
Ishrat Jahan was LeT operative: David Headley
cancel

Mumbai: Making fresh disclosures on the brazen 26/11 attacks, Pakistani-American terrorist David Coleman Headley Thursday said that Ishrat Jahan, a 19-year-old student who was killed in an encounter in Gujarat in 2004, was an LeT operative.

Jahan, along with three other men, were shot and killed in an encounter in the outskirts of Ahmedabad, by the Crime Branch of the Gujarat Police. The police claimed that all four were terrorists involved in a plot to kill Narendra Modi.

He also exposed how ISI and LeT majorly funded terror operations in India and financed him from time to time. He also revealed that Pakistan native Tahawwur Rana visited Mumbai before the terror strikes.

Resuming his deposition before a special court in Mumbai today via video-link after a day's break, resulting from a technical glitch at the US end yesterday, the LeT operative also said that RBI had turned down a request to open a bank account for their office in India.

Giving details of his funding, he said, "Before coming to India in September 2006, he received $25,000 from ISI's Major Iqbal."

"I also got 40,000 in Pakistani currency from LeT operative Sajid Mir between April and June 2008," he told the court, adding that Major Iqbal used to regularly sent him money in installments.

"Also, Major Iqbal gave me counterfeit Indian currency once or twice in 2008," he said. Abdul Rehman Pasha, also from ISI, gave him Rs 80,000, he added.

"Tahawur Rana (Headley's associate and a Pakistani native who operated a Chicago-based immigration business) used to send me money from the US in September 2006 when I came to India to do intelligence work on instructions of LeT," he told the court.

The 55-year-old, who recently turned approver in the case, also said that "it was my idea to open an office in India. It was a part of my cover (as an immigration consultant). I had discussed about this with Major Iqbal and Sajid Mir and they both agreed to it."

"I also told Rana that Major Iqbal had asked me to do intelligence work in India. Iqbal told me that if Rana was reluctant to be associated with this (Headley's India operations) then he (Headley) should appeal to his (Rana's) sense of patriotism towards Pakistan," he testified.

"But Rana was not reluctant and he agreed readily for me to go to India," Headley said.

Headley also revealed that Rana had visited Mumbai before the terror attacks.

"I advised Rana to leave India before the attacks as I was afraid that he would be in danger," he told the court.

Headley also disclosed that Rana had asked Raymond Sanders (who ran an immigrant law centre in Chicago) to submit an application to the RBI to open a bank account for their office in India.

However, RBI turned down the request, he said.

Show Full Article
Next Story