Prime Minister Narendra Modi was on a visit to Bihar on July 12. The militants were on the lookout for him at the time, Bihar police said. Hours after two people were arrested in Patna for being involved in anti-India activities, Bihar police revealed that one more person was arrested. Bihar police have arrested three people, including a retired Jharkhand police officer, with alleged links to the militant group Popular Front of India (PFI), exposing a “possible terrorist module involved in anti-India activities”.
The police said that all the accused had planned to attack a program attended by PM Modi on July 12. Mohammad Jalaluddin and Athar Parvez trained about 26 people to spread violence at PM Modi’s event in Patna on Tuesday. The Bihar Police busted the terrorist module on the evening of July 11.
Mohammad Jalaluddin and Athar Parvez, two of the three accused arrested by the police, trained about 26 people for terrorist missions and taught them to use guns, swords and knives. The PFI was hurt by the alleged ‘slanderous’ statements made by former BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma and they hatched a terrorist plot to retaliate against the alleged remarks.
As the Prime Minister was coming, the police were on high alert and were keeping a constant watch on terrorist organizations and their activities ahead of PM Modi’s visit. During the police investigation, they got information about the PFI office and the police started investigating it thoroughly, in which the whole conspiracy was caught.
Police have received several objectionable documents from the terrorists, which spoke about the rule of Islam in India by 2047.
It is noteworthy that the Islamic organization PFI works to spread poison, violence, terror against Hindu communities and the government. He has been found to be involved in anti-India activities. Evidence of this can be seen in the recent riots in several Indian cities, from the Shaheen Bagh anti-India protests, the anti-CAA riots and the Bengaluru riots in 2020. Following the banning of the radical Islamic organization SIMI, most of its members have merged into the PFI.
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