Abdul Subhan Qureshi

Abdul Subhan Qureshi
Born Abdul Subhan Haji Usman Qureshi
(1972-07-19) 19 July 1972
Rampur, Uttar Pradesh, India
Other names Abdul Subhan Usman Qureshi, Kasim, Zakir, Qab, Touqeer
Organization Indian Mujahideen
Spouse(s) Arifa Begum Qureshi

He is also a suspect in the 11 July 2006 Mumbai train bombings. He is more commonly known as Tauqeer and is believed to be the signer in the Indian Mujahideen terror email as al-Arabi.[1] He is listed on the NIA Most Wanted list.

Background

His working-class parents, Father Haji Usmaan Qureshi & Mother Zubeida Begum Qureshi who hailed from Rampur in Uttar Pradesh[2] migrated to Mumbai.[3] He finished his SSC (class X) from an institution run by an Islamic trust in Byculla in Mumbai. He graduated from the Antonio DeSouza High School in 1988, obtaining a good Secondary School Certificate with 76.6% marks. His sisters, Shabana, Asma and Safia, have MA Degrees, his eldest sister Farha has been a columnist in an Urdu newspaper "Inquilab" & an independent novelist, his youngest sister Hafsa, studies at Sophia college, Mumbai and none of his three well-educated brothers Imran, Numaan & Salman appear to have never been associated with SIMI.

In 1992 he began studies at the Bharatiya Vidyapeeth in Navi Mumbai. In 1995, he obtained a Diploma in Industrial Electronics, and got a part-time job at String Computers in Mazgaon. In 1996, he earned a specialised software maintenance training from the CMS Institute in Marol.

He joined Radical Solutions, a computer firm in the Fort area in South Mumbai in November 1996. According to his co-workers, Qureshi was an exceptional worker. In just three years, his salary was quadrupled. He handled several major independent projects, including an intranet for Bharat Petro-Chemicals carried out by Wipro in 1999, and then joined Datamatics.

In a 26 March 2001 letter, he resigned with a letter stating “I wish to inform you, that I have decided to devote one complete year to pursue religious and spiritual matters.”

Arrested SIMI leader Safdar Nagori, has told police that he knew Qureshi and they had attended a religious function in Delhi in 2000. Nagori has also told them that Qureshi attended a two-day SIMI meeting in Karnataka's Hubli and another SIMI meet at a Kerala forest in October 2007.

Police claims

According to the Mumbai police investigators, by 1998, he appears to have been a committed SIMI activist.[3] He was charged that year with defacing public property by pasting SIMI posters. Later, he edited SIMI’s magazine, the Islamic Voice, from New Delhi.

Police sources told The Hindu that he participated in the October,1999 SIMI conference where Sheikh Yasin, the head of the Hamas and the Pakistan Jamaat-e-Islami chief Qazi Hussain Ahmad, were among those who delivered speeches through a telephone network.

In SIMI’s 1999 Aurangabad convention which Qureshi is believed to have helped organize, many of the speeches delivered by delegates are reported to have been inflammatory. “Islam is our nation, not India,” said Mohammad Amir Shakeel Ahmad, one of the SIMI-linked Lashkar operatives arrested in 2005 for smuggling in military-grade explosives and assault rifles for a supposed planned series of attacks in Gujarat.

Qureshi is thought to have been one of the principal organisers of SIMI’s last public conference in 2001 where SIMI leaders told the estimated 25,000 members that the time had come for Indian Muslims to launch an armed Jihad which would have the establishment of a Caliphate as its final aim.

It is believed that finding Qureshi - as well as individuals like Qayamuddin Kapadia, the missing Vadodara based computer-graphics artist - could be instrumental in preventing the next big terror attack.

Defended by Family

His mother Zubeda Qureshi claimed that she had not seen her son in seven years and did not think he was involved. She said if he was guilty, he should be hanged.

"We know Subhaan is innocent. We want him to come forward and clear his name".

The press conference included representatives of Ekta Welfare Association, Maharashtra Legal Aid Forum and Movement for Peace and Justice, and 17 Muslim organisations (including Editor-Publisher of The Hindustan Daily Urdu Sarfaraz Arzu). The Muslim organisations termed the charges against him as a conspiracy theory by the Sangh Parivar.

See also

References

  1. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-08-19/india/27930826_1_jaipur-blasts-serial-blasts-abdul-subhan Mumbai's Tauqeer sent email after Jaipur blasts: Investigators
  2. http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2008-09-16/mumbai/27905655_1_safdar-nagori-simi-students-islamic-movement House shift, marriage couldn't lure him away from Simi
  3. 1 2 http://www.hindu.com/2008/09/13/stories/2008091355761100.htm The hunt for the Indian Mujahideen’s ‘al-Arbi’,13 September 2008
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