Dawat e riyaz

  1. Udaipur Tailor's Killing: Agencies Scan Gos And Riyaz's Pak Contacts, Dawat
  2. Murder of Kanhaiya Lal
  3. India Today exclusive probe: How Pak


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Udaipur Tailor's Killing: Agencies Scan Gos And Riyaz's Pak Contacts, Dawat

Investigating agencies are verifying more details about the 18-19 Pakistani phone numbers that Mohammad Riyaz Attari and Gos Mohammad, two accused in the brutal killing of Rajasthan tailor Kanhaiyya Lal Teli, were allegedly in touch with, CNN-News18 has learnt. Investigators are trying to ascertain the details of these individuals who are apparently from the Madani channel owned by Sunni outfit Dawat-e-Islami. According to sources, agencies are verifying if these individuals from Pakistan instigated the accused to carry out the murder. Dawat-e-Islami is a Karachi-based organisation run by Maulana Ilyas Attar Qadri. The organisation also has branches in Nagpur, Ahmedabad, and Mumbai. It has centres in Nepalgunj in Nepal and this route is used for Pakistan as well. About ten Indian states have branches of Dawat-e-Islami. In 2011, Dawat-e-Islami operative Mumtaz Qadri killed Pakistan’s Punjab province governor Salman Taseer. The outfit has also opened bookstalls as well as primary schools and madrassas in India, where those between the ages of six and 20 are admitted and given religious education. Once they are ready, certain identified youth are called to Karachi. There they are given Islamic education and taught how to work, say sources. After the controversy over now-ousted BJP leader Nupur Sharma’s comments on Prophet Muhammad, two Pakistani nationals Salman Bhai and Abbu Ibrahim told Gos and Riyaz to carry out a protest on the issue and asked Gos Mohammad to do something...

Murder of Kanhaiya Lal

• v • t • e Kanhaiya Lal Teli was a Lal was killed for allegedly sharing a Local authorities announced a curfew and blocked internet access after videos of the attack went viral on social media, triggering mass outrage across India. The Indian government made attempts to stop the video of the brutal attack from circulating online. Background [ ] Kanhaiya Lal Teli (also reported as Kanhaiya Lal Sahu, born c. 1982) was a tailor from the Dhanmandi area of Udaipur, the father of two sons who belonged to the Hindu On June 11, Lal's neighbor Nazim had registered a case against him over a controversial social media post, stating support for Nupur Sharma, which led to Lal's arrest. Subsequently, Lal was released on bail. On June 15, Lal had filed a request for protection with the local police after receiving death threats. Murder [ ] Muhammad Riyaz Attari, one of the two accused, had made a video days before the attack on June 17 where he stated his intent for murder for remarks against the prophet Muhammad, to make a "viral" video and his On June 28, two assailants entered Lal's tailor shop posing as customers. When Lal began taking the measurements for one of them, he was attacked with cleavers at 2.45 p.m. The entire attack was caught on video by the assailants. After subduing Lal, the two accused dragged him out of the shop and slit his throat with a makeshift dagger made at their welding workshop. In what seems to be a second video (taken after the attack), they boasted about...

India Today exclusive probe: How Pak

By Md Hizbullah: Pakistan was quick to issue a denial when the Rajasthan police found that the assassins of tailor Kanhaiya Lal in Udaipur had links with a Karachi-based Islamic organisation, Dawat-e-Islami. “We have seen reports in a segment of the Indian media referring to investigations into the murder case in Udaipur, mischievously seeking to link the accused individuals, Indian nationals, to an organisation in Pakistan. We categorically reject any such insinuations,” the Pakistani foreign affairs ministry said in an official statement on June 29. The Pakistan-based Dawat-e-Islami’s reach, in fact, doesn’t seem to be limited to a handful of fanatics like the killers of Kanhaiya Lal. India Today’s special investigation has found the organisation has exploited digital technology in order to push its radical agenda into the homes Indian Muslims. India Today Investigation | Inside Dawat-E-Islami's India network. Watch this report ( On its website, www.dawateislami.net, it offers several online religious programmes. Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, Hong Kong, Korea, the UK and the US figure in the list of its countries of operations but not India. INDIAN/PAK NUMBERS, SKYPE HANDLES, PROGRAMME COORDINATORS But when India Today’s investigative reporter applied for one of Dawat-e-Islami’s courses on July 22 as an Indian national under a pseudonym Rashid Ahmed, no less of a shock surfaced when the organisation responded after a couple of hours on mail. Its message advised an India...