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INVESTIGATION Kerala's missing: Vanished into Islamic State?
Despite the combined efforts of the several Intelligence establishments of the Centre and the police force and its secret investigations wing of the State, the mystery behind the disappearance of 21 people, including six women and three children, from Kasaragod and Palakkad districts of Kerala, who are feared to have joined the global terror group Islamic State, remains unresolved more than a week after reports first appeared in the media.
The number of the missing persons, all under the age of 30, well-educated (indeed exempting the children) and belonging to middle and upper middle class families, is officially said to be 21 as Kerala’s Marxist Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan announced in the Assembly earlier this week, but cases of at least seven more persons, including two children, missing in similar circumstances have come to light since his statement. That places the number of missing people at 28 and it could rise further.
Sixteen of those missing are born Muslims while two men and three women are converts into Islam from Hinduism and Christianity. Relatives, friends and neighbours of the missing Muslim youth vouch that they had never shown signs of being overly religious nor had they shown any interest in routine religious affairs.
All used to be well-mannered young men and women who had opted for professional studies and acquired degrees in engineering, management and IT. Not even a petty case exists against any of them in any of the police stations anywhere. All had left their homes and villages within the past two months and had told their parents and families that they were going to Sri Lanka for religious studies or leaving for Mumbai or somewhere else in search of jobs or on some other reason.
The first seeds of suspicion that they might have joined the Islamic State were sown after A Hakeem, one of those missing from Thrikkarippur in Kasaragod, sent a WhatsApp message saying, “From hell, I have reached heaven where I can lead an Islamic way of life.” That was about 11 days ago.
Then the doubt spread that they could have gone to Syria or Afghanistan to join the terror force. Intelligence agencies are said to have received credible information that many of them had reached Islamic State camps and some of them could have used Teheran, Iran, as their transit point. However, the State and Central agencies are still either unable or reluctant to officially confirm that they have joined the Islamic State.
The details of the missing people are interesting. The following list is of those missing from Padanna and Thrikkarippur areas in Kasaragod:
- Ijas, a doctor who used to practice in a hospital at Vadakara in Kozhikode district. Ijas is said to be one of the two chief organisers of the group and their long journey presumably to Islamic State camps.
- Ijas had taken his wife Rifaila (who on last Sunday told her father over voice-mail that they have not turned extremists) and their one-and-a-half-year-old son along with him. The woman was carrying her second child when they left.
- Ijas’s brother Shiyaz, a management degree-holder left home with his pregnant wife Ajmela, a physiotherapist.
- PK Ashfaq, a cousin of Ijas and Shiyaz. Ashfaq, son of a Kasaragod Muslim doing business in Mumbai, had left with his wife Shamsiya and two-year-old daughter.
- Hafeezuddin, son of Hakeem. He had got married just four months but “luckily, he has not taken his wife along,” says Hakeem.
- Muhammad Mansad
- Abdul Rasheed Abdullah, son of an NRI, holding an engineering degree. Rasheed, said to the captain of the team, is an engineer and was working with the local Peace International School on a paltry salary compared to the money he was earning when he was in the Gulf.
- Rasheed has taken his wife Ayisha, a Christian named Sonia who embraced Islam just before their marriage. They have taken their little daughter Sarah along with them. Ayisha holds BTech and MBA degrees.
- Marvan Islamil, another well-qualified Muslim.
- Feroze Khan, a BCom degree holder, who, according to Intelligence sources, was taken into custody from Mumbai last Sunday.
- Essah, who used to be Begson Vincent in his earlier avatar.
- Essah has taken his wife Fatima, originally a Hindu named Nimisha from Attukal, Thiruvananthapuram, who was a BDS student in a Kasaragod college when she converted and married the converted young man.
- Essah’s brother Yahia, originally named Bestin.
- His wife Mariyam, a Christian girl named Merin Jacob originally hailing from Thammanam in Kochi. She was working with an MNC in Mumbai when her life changed.
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Sagarneel SinhaSagarneel Sinha
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