Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Armed and doubly dangerous: Local arms factories give Delhi criminals a lethal weapons edge



Criminals in Delhi are arming themselves with sophisticated weapons that are readily available from
local arms factories, making them more dangerous than ever before.

According to Delhi Police sources, some of these weapons can use ammunition meant for imported arms, which are available on the black market and have added to their firepower.
Delhi Police has prepared an eye-opening report on the ‘easy availability of high-quality firearms’ in the Capital and the National Capital Region. It says illegal arms used by gangs are usually well-made replicas of top quality weapons sold in the international market. They are cheap, which enables the criminals to buy them.
Dharmendra Kumar, who was involved in the Murder of Dr Sanjeev Dhawan
Dr Sanjeev Dhawan, Senior Cardiologist, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital who was shot dead at his residence in New Delhi
Gun crime: Cardiologist Dr Sanjeev Dhawan (right) was recently shot dead at home by Dharmendra Tandon, a former army gunner
With growing evidence of the proliferation of these weapons, Delhi Police shared the report with state police chiefs at the recently held conference of DGPs as part of an effort to curb the menace.
The police claimed that in September alone such weapons were used in over ten murders in the Capital.
The crime network operates well beyond Delhi. In a recent operation carried out over 15 days, the Muzaffarnagar police seized over 40 country-made .315 and 12 bore pistols.
“We have busted four illegal arms factories and seized all the material used in making these weapons. They have mastered the art of making these weapons and it is hard to notice any difference between country-made and imported weapons of the same format,” said V.B. Singh, senior superintendent of police, Muzaffarnagar.
Country-made 0.315 bore weapons are easily available for Rs 3,000 to Rs 5,000 in different parts of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar.
Many first time criminals have also managed to get sophisticated pistols in the Capital, where they cost between Rs 35,000 and Rs 50,000.
police report highlights

According to police officials, automatic assault rifles can be procured from places like Dadri and cheaper variants can be brought from Meerut and Ghaziabad.
A senior police official in Uttar Pradesh also pointed out that the laws in the country are not stringent enough to act as actual deterrents.
The Delhi Police report was prepared following the recovery of a huge cache of sophisticated weapons from criminals in the capital and the NCR area. The police are worried about a possible explosion of violence.
A police officer who did not wish to be named said there are fears that even petty criminals will use these weapons for chain snatching or picking pockets.
Delhi Police Commissioner Neeraj Kumar has constituted a special cell within the crime branch to keep tabs on cases of gun running.
“We have looked in detail at the forward and backward linkages and carried out joint operations at several places to corner the gun running mafia,” said Kumar.

The police have prepared an action plan to control trafficking in the sophisticated arms. This includes a proposal for amending rules in the Arms Act to make bail difficult for those held under the Act.
The Delhi Police report says the government should reduce the quota of ammunition available to individual license holders.
shot dead this month

As in the army, every licensed gun user will have to deposit used cartridges with the arms dealers before getting a fresh stock.
Many a time, senior police officials believe that licensed arms dealers sell the quota of ammunition to others, and they go on to leak it to criminals who misuse it in various antisocial activities.
Delhi Police also observed that the criminals use factory-made ammunition in the sophisticated country-made weapons, which further aggravates the problem.
Delhi Police recommended a fresh audit of all arms dealers to get the latest statistics and maintain a database of outgoing and incoming ammunition to these dealers.
The police have identified areas like Munger in Bihar and Jalalabad in the Muzaffarnagar district of Uttar Pradesh where licenses have been given to arms dealers for manufacturing weapons.
“We have sent police teams to these areas to collect intelligence about the whole operations there and the possibility of leakage of arms to criminal elements,” Kumar said.
Interestingly, the Delhi Police report observed that weapons from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar do not find buyers in the Capital alone. They are selling like hot cakes in the Maoist areas.
The report proposes that the police should be allowed to take a photograph of a weapon before it is sealed, so that when it is produced in court the judge is aware how advanced the weapon is.
This is to ensure that the case is not treated like a regular arms recovery.
READ MORE - Armed and doubly dangerous: Local arms factories give Delhi criminals a lethal weapons edge

Monday, September 24, 2012

Drugs hidden in 13 sacks seized in Manipur

 IMPHAL: A joint team of sleuths and security personnel seized a huge quantity of psychotropic drugs including Spasmo Proxyvon (SP) and C-U-Kuf concealed inside 13 medium-sized sacks from a cement-laden truck at Kanglatongbi near Imphal.

Acting on specific information, sleuths from the Special Intelligence Unit (SIU) and the narcotic cell of Imphal West District Police and 43 Assam Rifles personnel intercepted the drugs ferried from Guwahati on Sunday.

The joint security team also pulled up the driver of the truck, identified as Md Farooque Khan of Khabeishoi village in Imphal East, police sources said, adding that the owner of the truck is also a Muslim from the state.

Each uncoated C-U-Kuf tablet contains 60mg of pseudoephedrine hydrochloride and 2.5mg of triproclidine hydrochloride, the sources added.

The cement consignment was being shipped in for one store at Churachandpur, while the drugs loaded from Guwahati were dispatched in the name of an individual at Khurai in Imphal East.

There have been earlier instances of interception of a huge quantity of drugs containing pseudoephedrine meant for smuggling to Myanamar. SP capsules have now become a serious menace in the state.

The cops have begun a probe to nab the ring leader behind the flow of psychotropic drugs in the state.

In another operation by 24 Assam Rifles, two drug peddlers were apprehended with a whopping 1,16,150 Sucet tablets and 1,00,740 Skuf tablets from Lokchao area near the border town of Moreh.
READ MORE - Drugs hidden in 13 sacks seized in Manipur

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Man arrested for shooting woman on busy Delhi road while son watched


Man arrested for shooting woman on busy Delhi road while son watchedNew Delhi: A woman who was shot dead on a busy road in North West Delhi was allegedly murdered by a man related to her husband's ex-wife, says the Delhi Police, who has arrested the man.

Meenakshi Rana was dropping her young son to school in a rickshaw in Rohini when a gunman on a bike pulled up and fired at her several times.  The shooter then escaped.

Newspapers report that Mrs Rana at first tried to dodge bullets by hiding behind cars and trees but the gunman was able to catch up with her. After killing her, he escaped on his bike.

Mrs Rana had allegedly married her husband before he formally divorced his first wife, according to the police.
READ MORE - Man arrested for shooting woman on busy Delhi road while son watched

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Assam girl confined, gang raped for 8 days

NEW DELHI, Sept 12 : Four men assaulted her, police manage to arrest one culprit and his wife

 A 16-year-old girl from Assam was allegedly confined at a house in Khyala in west Delhi for eight days and raped by four men. A couple has been arrested in this connection, police said.

The rapists released her after her health deteriorated, following which she went to the house of  an acquaintance.

When her health improved in few days, she approached police and filed an FIR.
She worked as a maid at a house in Rohini. On August 25, she quit the job and called Imran, who was known to her, and asked him to find her shelter for a day before she looks for another job.

She reached Raghubir Nagar on Imran’s direction to spend the night at his friend Nawal Kishore’s house.

As Nawal lived with his wife Shabeena, the victim thought it was safe to stay there, said a police officer. Imran and Nawal called two of their friends Lalu and Mithun.
At night, they forced the victim to drink and raped her.

The next morning, Kishore told his wife to keep a tab on the victim so that she does not escape.

The girl was confined for seven more days, and the four men raped her every day.
When her health deteriorated, they hired an autorickshaw and asked her to leave and threatened her as well.

Traumatised and unwell, she reached the house of her acquaintance, from where after regaining health she went to a police station on Monday.

A case of rape was filed with Khyala police station after a medical test of the victim, and Nawal and his wife Shabeena were arrested.

“A hunt is on to arrest the rest,” said the police officer.
The girl came to Delhi two years ago with a woman from her hometown in Assam, looking for a job.


The woman introduced her to a placement agency, which made her work in a house in the city.

After working for a year there, she left and started looking for a different job. The placement agency then sent her to Gujarat.

She worked there for nine months as a maid, after which she returned to Delhi and started working in a house in Rohini.
READ MORE - Assam girl confined, gang raped for 8 days