NIA Raids: Ex-PFI state secretary arrested in Kerala
NIA Raids: Ex-PFI state secretary arrested in Kerala
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) arrested the former state secretary of the Popular Front of India (PFI), who had been absconding for several months. According to the Agency, the officials raided CA Rauf’s residence in the Pattambi area of Palakkad district on October 27 night and arrested him.
Kerala Police and NIA both were tracking Rauf and he was under their radar, the officials intensified their attempt to nab the ex-secretary after the Central Government banned the PFI.
According to the officials CA Rauf went underground after the NIA launched a massive nationwide operation against the outfit and arrested several cadres.
The move comes almost a month after the Centre declared the PFI an 'unlawful association' and banned it for the next five years, as well as directed all states and the Union Territories (UTs) to "exercise" powers of Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act against the outfit and its affiliates.
In September, over 100 PFI cadres were arrested in multiple raids carried out across the country by the NIA, the Enforcement Directorate and state agencies as well as police forces based on findings about a number of "instances of international linkages of PFI with Global Terrorist Groups like Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)".The PFI and its associates are also charged for working covertly to increase the radicalization of one community by promoting a sense of insecurity in the country, which is substantiated by the fact that some PFI cadres have joined international terrorist organisations.
The PFI is further accused of its involvement in several criminal and terror cases as well as sheer disrespect towards the constitutional authority of the country. With funds and ideological support from outside, the PFI and its affiliates are further accused of becoming a major threat to the internal security of the country.
The PFI came into existence on December 9, 2006. Three south Indian Muslim fundamentalist outfits -- the National Development Front (NDF), Kerala; the Karnataka Forum for Dignity (KFD), Karnataka; and the Manitha Neethi Pasarai (MNP), Tamil Nadu-- rechristened the 'South India Council' (a Bangalore based organisation floated by NDF in 2004) as the 'Popular Front of India'.