Accused wanted to revive terror outfit: Cops
Srinagar, April 17 -- The so-called white collar terror module behind the November 10, 2025 Red Fort blast was engaged in a conspiracy to revive the banned terrorist outfit Ansar Ghazwat-ul-Hind (AGuH) under the guise of the more notorious Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM), the Jammu and State Investigation Agency (SIA) said in a chargesheet filed on Thursday. The chargesheet that names ten individuals, including four doctors, was filed in connection with an FIR registered in Nowgam, Srinagar, over provocative and threatening posters pasted in the area in October, an SIA spokesperson said in a statement. The National Investigation Agency (NIA) is investigating the main blast case.
The SIA said the poster campaign was a coordinated terrorist conspiracy intended to spread fear, disturb public order, and challenge India's sovereignty. Investigations indicate this was part of an effort to revive AGuH through a clandestine module focused on radicalization, recruitment, while preparing for nationwide attacks, it said.
"The investigation further established that the accused deliberately used the name of JeM to exploit its notoriety and create psychological impact, while covertly advancing the re- establishment and operational build-up of AGuH, reflecting a calculated attempt to mislead security agencies and conceal their true objectives," the SIA said. AGuh was banned by the Centre in 2018.
The SIA said members of the module were highly educated individuals, including medical professionals, and had been using institutional spaces for unlawful activities, including digital dissemination of extremist propaganda. They were involved in the procurement and experimental fabrication of explosives within residential premises and facilities linked to Al-Falah Medical College/University in Faridabad, the SIA said....
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