Nizamuddin Markaz: Delhi Police to chargesheet 280 foreign visitors who attended Tablighi Jamaat event
Earlier this month, the Crime Branch had collected several documents related to the funding of Tablighi Jamaat members
by DNA Web TeamThe Delhi Police Crime Branch will on Wednesday file charge sheets against 280 foreign visitors from 13 nations who attended the Tablighi Jamaat congregation at Delhi's Nizamuddin Markaz in March this year amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic outbreak.
The Maulana Saad-led Nizamuddin was earlier blamed for overruling the government's ban on any kind of public gathering in the view of the virus outbreak.
According to sources, the Crime Branch will file the charge sheet at Delhi's Saket court, naming at least 280 foreign nationals who attended the Markaz event. Among these, many belong to Saudi Arabia, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Brazil.
Earlier this month, the Crime Branch had collected several documents related to the funding of Tablighi Jamaat members, besides seizing passports of five close associates of Jamaat chief Maulana Saad.
The Delhi Police has completed the interrogation of all foreign Jamaat members. Some of these had reportedly disclosed during the interrogation that they continued to stay at the Markaz even after March 20 at the behest of Maulana Saad.
The team also traced several bank accounts linked to Tablighi Jamaat Markaz and found out that it was receiving funds through several Gulf nations.
Earlier on May 5, the Delhi Police had the grilled sons of Maulana Saad and sought details of people who had attended the religious congregation at the Markaz, or were part of the managing committee.
On May 15, prominent Muslim organisation Jamiat Ulema-e-Hind had stated that as many as 1,640 foreign Tablighi Jamaat members from 47 countries were in India at the time of Nizamuddin Markaz gathering, of whom only 64 tested positive for COVID-19 and two more died of the virus.
Jamiat president Maulana Arshad Madani said the "highlighting" of Tablighi Jamaat cases while talking about the total number of cases in the country had allegedly created an atmosphere of hatred against Muslims.
According to government data, the Jamaat event held at Nizamuddin Markaz in March this year during the pandemic led to a sharp 30% rise in the total COVID-19 cases across the country. The Jamaat attendees, many of who were foreign nationals, had dispersed to different parts of the country, thereby leading to a sharp surge in the number of positive cases.