Indian police raid houses in southern state a week after Sri Lanka bombings
National Investigation Agency says three people are suspected to have links with some of the accused
NEW DELHI:
Indian police said on Sunday they raided the houses of three suspects in connection with a case concerning 15 people who left India to join the militant group, a week after bombings in Sri Lanka that killed more than 250.
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) said it carried out searches at the three houses in the southern state of Kerala, located near the tip of the Indian peninsula.
The coordinated suicide bombings by militants at hotels and churches in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday sent shockwaves through the Indian Ocean island state that had enjoyed relative peace since a civil war ended a decade ago.
Sri Lanka bombings mastermind spent 'substantial time in India'
“These persons are suspected to have links with some of the accused persons in the said case who had exited India to join the proscribed militant organisation ISIS/Daish,” the NIA said in a statement.
The investigators recovered mobile phones, SIM cards, digital storage devices including CDs and DVDs of preacher Zakir Naik and diaries with notes handwritten in Malayalam and Arabic, the NIA said.
Current and former state police officials told Reuters extremism hardly posed a threat in the state, which they said had a history of peaceful co-existence between the majority Hindu community and religious minorities.
“Compared to the large Islamic population, the percentage of people is a very small number, not at all a significant number,” a senior state police official told Reuters.
Indian police said on Sunday they raided the houses of three suspects in connection with a case concerning 15 people who left India to join the militant group, a week after bombings in Sri Lanka that killed more than 250.
The National Investigation Agency (NIA) said it carried out searches at the three houses in the southern state of Kerala, located near the tip of the Indian peninsula.
The coordinated suicide bombings by militants at hotels and churches in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday sent shockwaves through the Indian Ocean island state that had enjoyed relative peace since a civil war ended a decade ago.
Sri Lanka bombings mastermind spent 'substantial time in India'
“These persons are suspected to have links with some of the accused persons in the said case who had exited India to join the proscribed militant organisation ISIS/Daish,” the NIA said in a statement.
The investigators recovered mobile phones, SIM cards, digital storage devices including CDs and DVDs of preacher Zakir Naik and diaries with notes handwritten in Malayalam and Arabic, the NIA said.
Current and former state police officials told Reuters extremism hardly posed a threat in the state, which they said had a history of peaceful co-existence between the majority Hindu community and religious minorities.
“Compared to the large Islamic population, the percentage of people is a very small number, not at all a significant number,” a senior state police official told Reuters.