Police lured a minor Dalit girl from her village in Uttar Pradesh and taken to Kerala, where she was forced to convert before being admitted to terrorist activities, police on Monday blew up the lid from a suspected radical network.
The conspiracy began when the 15 -year -old, who was allegedly taken from his village in Phulpur area of ​​Prayagraj district on 8 May, ran away from Kerala and contacted his mother. Two people have been arrested.
According to DCP Kuldeep Singh Gunwat, the teenager was being forced to join the jihadi activities and somehow managed to reach the Tricur railway station from where he reached his mother with the help of the local police.
He said that he was lured by a 19 -year -old woman called Darkasha Bano, which has been measured with a person named Mohammad Kaif, he said.
The DCP said, “After contacting his mother from Kerala, the girl was brought back for prayer and is currently being placed in a stop center for protection. A case is registered against Darkasha Bano, Mohammad Kaif and an unknown person, who was allegedly threatened the victim’s family on the phone.”
During the initial interrogation, the girl said that other minor girls were also being targeted and recruited by the same group.
On 26 June, the girl’s mother lodged a formal complaint at Phulpur police station stating that her daughter was lured and removed.
The complainant also received threats from an unknown number when she reached the police for help.
According to Gunwat, the girl was introduced to suspicious persons who first fascinated her with money, then allegedly forced her to convert her religion and then pressurized her to participate in extremist activities.
He said that Kaif had taken him to the Shirdharaj Junction railway station on a motorcycle and allegedly harassed him. Darkasha Bano later took him to the train and then to Delhi in Kerala, where he was introduced to unknown persons involved in the radical network.
Gunwat said that the accused were working as part of an organized syndicate with the aim of misleading girls and pushing them into anti-national and terrorist activities.
Three dedicated police teams have been formed, which are formed to investigate further leads and detect the full network attached to the suspects.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without amending the text.