NIA Raids In Terror Funding Case, Srinagar, Delhi NGOs Searched
Today’s searches are continued from yesterday’s raids by the NIA at 10 locations in Srinagar and one in Bengaluru
Six non-profits and trust and nine places, including the property of former Delhi Minority Commission chief Zafarul-Islam Khan have been raided by the National Investigation Agency (NIA) in a terror funding case.
The six NGOs attacked by the NIA are Falah-e-Aam Trust, Charity Alliance, Human Welfare Foundation, JK Yateem Foundation, Salvation Movement, and J&K Voice of Victims.
The two NGOs Charity Alliance and Human Welfare Foundation are situated in Delhi, while the rest is situated in Jammu and Kashmir’s Srinagar.
Mr. Khan is the establishing editorial manager of the paper Milli Gazette and administrator of Charity Alliance.
The present quests are proceeded from the previous assaults by the NIA at 10 areas in Srinagar and one in Bengaluru regarding the case wherein some non-benefits are associated with bringing assets up in India and abroad for doing dissenter action in Jammu and Kashmir.
A few implicating archives and electronic gadgets have been seized, sources said.
NIA authorities yesterday attacked the homes and workplaces of Khurram Parvez, facilitator of J&K Coalition of Civil Society; his partners Parvez Ahmad Bukhari, Parvez Ahmad Matta, and Swati Sheshadri; Parveena Ahanger, executive of Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons, NGO Athrout, and the Greater Kailash Trust.
Individuals’ Democratic Party boss Mehbooba Mufti called the NIA assaults a “horrible crackdown on disagree”. “NIA strikes on common liberties extremist Khurram Parvez and Greater Kashmir office in Srinagar is one more case of GOIs horrendous crackdown on an opportunity of articulation and contradiction. Unfortunately, NIA has become BJPs pet organization to scare and bully the individuals who will not conform,” Ms. Mufti tweeted on Wednesday.
The NIA in an announcement asserted these alleged non-benefits have been getting cash from undisclosed contributors, which was then being utilized to finance dread exercises.
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