'Raj govt had received inputs of SIMI threat to Rushdie'

Salman Rushdie's 'plotting' allegations diffused.

PTI | January 24, 2012



Dismissing Salman Rushdie's charge that the state police had invented a "plot" to keep him away from the Literature Festival, the Rajasthan government tonight said it had received intelligence inputs that the banned SIMI was planning to target him during the festival.

"Salman Rushdie's allegation on Rajasthan police is completely baseless. The state government had received reactions and inputs from intelligence agencies, individuals and organisations in this regard," Principal Secretary (Home) G S Sandhu said in a statement.

"The intelligence agencies informed the state government five-six times from December 28, 2011 to January 20, 2012 that SIMI was planning to target Rushdie during the festival. The agencies also said that a former general secretary of SIMI deputed a man in June 2010 to target Rushdie when he finds an occasion. The man was given money and weapon too," he said.

Sandhu said the man who was assigned the task had also conducted a survey of Godrej guest house in Mumbai where Rushdie stays during his Mumbai visit.

Referring to a letter no. 14012/26/2012-NI 1, Sandhu said that the state government received an advisory from the Union Home Ministry on January 17 in which it was informed that a former office bearer of SIMI Sakib Nachan was planning to target Rushdie during his (proposed) Jaipur visit.

"In the advisory, it was mentioned that one Saiyad Nuri announced a cash reward of Rs 1 lakh for hurling shoe at Rushdie.

The state government was directed to make elaborate arrangements for security and law and order," he said.

By these facts, it is clear that Rushdie's allegation on Rajasthan police is absolutely "groundless", Sandhu said

The Booker Prize winning author, in his tweets, yesterday accused the Rajasthan police of inventing a "plot" to keep him away from the festival.

 

Comments

 

Other News

Supreme Court gets five new judges

Five new judges were appointed to the Supreme Court of India on Monday. "Vide Notifications of even number dated 01.06.2026, in exercise of the powers conferred by clause (2) of Article 124 of the Constitution of India, the Hon’ble President of India is pleased to appoint (i) Shri

Astonishing breadth and depth of ancient Indian knowledge systems

The Greatest Books of Ancient India: Incredible Ideas about Science, Music, Maths, Art and More By Dr. Pradeep Chakravarthy and Dr. R. Thiagarajan Hachette India, 208 pages, Rs 399  

Strong El Nino threat over India`s monsoon, food & water security

India is heading into the southwest monsoon season this year under the shadow of a rapidly strengthening El Nino, with meteorologists warning that the climate phenomenon could significantly disrupt rainfall patterns, intensify heat stress and place additional pressure on the country’s agriculture-d

How corporates can nudge real change

The Business Of Business Is (Not) Just Business: How Behavioural Tools Can Drive Real Change Edited by Sutapa Banerjee, with Foreword by Nadir Godrej HarperCollins, 336 pages, Rs 699  

India stopped jailing people for paperwork. Now comes the hard part

A small pharmacist in Rajkot neglects to change a notice in his store under a little-known clause of a public health law. This was not only a non-compliance matter, but also a criminal offence, and a jail sentence was the punishment under the old system. Not a fine. Not a warning. Jail. Now scale

How to make our cities climate-resilient

Indian cities are growing at a pace that our infrastructure and climate can no longer sustain. This rapid urban sprawl increasingly strains urban systems, overshadowing the severe environmental fallout produced in its wake. The repercussions include Urban Heat Island Effect (UHI), Urban Floods, and many mo





Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter