Part of funding for 9/11 came from India: says former Delhi top cop Neeraj Kumar
New Delhi: Funds for September 11 attacks in the US in year 2001 were partly originated from India, according to a former Delhi Police commissioner Neeraj Kumar, who has based his claim on the "revelation"
New Delhi: Funds for September 11 attacks in the US in year 2001 were partly originated from India, according to a former Delhi Police commissioner Neeraj Kumar, who has based his claim on the "revelation" made by a terrorist.
In his book 'Dial D for Don', Kumar said the funds were raised from a kidnapping and handed over to the chief of the 9/11 attackers Mohammad Atta by terrorist Omar Sheikh who was released by India in exchange of hijacked Indian Airlines plane in 1999.
Sheikh was given the money by terrorist Aftab Ansari, who was responsible for the attack on the American Center in Kolkata, says the 1976-batch IPS officer citing information obtained from Harkat-ul Mujahideen terrorist Asif Raza Khan.
Asif Raza said his "boss Aftab Ansari had shared the ransom money collected in the kidnapping of Partha Pratim Roy Burman, chairman-cum-managing director of Khadim Shoes with Omar Sheikh," according to Kumar. Ansari is awaiting hanging in a West Bengal jail for the American Center attack.
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"Part of the ransom money received in the Burman kidnapping — about USD 100,000 (at the time Rs 49 lakh)— had later found its way from Omar Sheikh to Mohammad Atta, the chief of the 9/11 attackers," Kumar, who had served in CBI and retired as Delhi Police commissioner said in his book.
Kumar, who is at present heading the anti-corruption wing of BCCI, said the revelation of Asif Raza Khan that ransom money was passed on to Mohammed Atta was mentioned in the testimony of John S Pistole, deputy assistant director, counter-terrorism division of FBI before the Senate Committee on Terrorist Financing in July 2003 at Washington.
In his tell-all book on underworld activities post-1993 Bombay blasts, Kumar narrates many spine-chilling incidents of chase, plans, bureaucratic wrangling and finally his telephonic conversations with India's most wanted terrorist Dawood Ibrahim.
"It's only an attempt to share my story, my experiences and some of my cases which have no bearing on national security," he says.
In the book, he also mentions a call he had received towards the fag end of his career when he led an operation in which some of the cricketers were arrested for alleged spot-fixing during the T-20 tournament.
"I think it was Dawood or his brother Anees who told me that I should stop chasing them as I was about to retire," remembers Kumar with a smile on his face.
(With inputs from PTI)